Court Opinion

ID: 6601187
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:07:47.282155+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:01.231613
License: Public Domain

Cole. J.
This is an appeal from an order vacating an order of arrest. The order vacating the order of arrest was made November 11, 1872. On the next day notice of appeal and a copy of the undertaking were served upon the defendants, but the undertaking and notice were not served upon the clerk until the 16th of December, 1872. It is now claimed on the part of the defendants, that the appeal was not in time, and that it should be dismissed.
The statute provides that an appeal from an order may be taken within thirty days after vjritten notice of the making of the same. Sec. 9, ch. 264, Laws of 1860. It is not claimed that there was any written notice given of the making of the order appealed from, or at least there is no evidence that such notice was given. It is said on the part of the defendants that the service of notice of appeal on them is either evidence of the service of written notice of the making of the order, or is a waiver of such service. We see no sufficient reason for holding either alternative proposition as correct. Service of notice of appeal upon the adverse party furnishes no proof of the fact that a written notice of the entry of the order had been given. If written notice had been given, that fact should have been shown by the defendants in some proper manner. And in the case of Corwith v. The State Bank of Illinois, 18 Wis., 560, this court held that, in order to limit the time for appealing, written notice must be given, and that the limitation did not begin to run until this was done. That decision disposes of the question of waiver, and clearly shows that this appeal cannot be dismissed because not taken in time.
The first objection relied on by the plaintiff for a reversal of the order is, that the defendants had no right to move to vacate the order of arrest after taking the steps which they did before making that motion. It appears that the order of arrest was granted by the commissioner on the 4th of November. The undertaking on bail given by the defendant- Judge Downer bears date November 7th ; and that given by the defendant *224Noonan, November 8tb. On tbe 8tb, tbe sheriff returned to the plaintiff tbe order of arrest and copies of the undertakings, and asked the plaintiff if he was satisfied with the bail; and the plaintiff told the sheriff that he accepted said bail, and immediately indorsed his acceptance on each of the copies. Both defendants gave notice of retainer and demand of a copy of the complaint, on the 8th of November. On the same day Judge Downer served upon the plaintiff an order, granted by the county judge, to show cause on the 11th of that month why the order of arrest should not be vacated; and he states in his affidavit that this service was made “ before the undertaking on bail as to this defendant was delivered to the sheriff.”
Now it is said, that, the defendants having given bail which was accepted by the plaintiff, and the defendants being discharged from custody, and they also having given notice of retainer and demanded a copy of the complaint, they thereby waived or lost all right to move to vacate the order of arrest. We think, however, that no such consequences follow from the acts of the defendants, for this reason: Our statute (sec. 28, ch. 127, R. S.) provides that a defendant arrested may, at any time before the justification of bail, apply on motion to vacate the order of arrest or reduce the amount of bail. In this case, of course, justification became unnecessary, because the plaintiff immediately accepted the bail which was given. Still, it seems to us that it would be unreasonable to say that the defendants were deprived of the right to move to vacate the order of arrest by this immediate acceptance. The statute, doubtless intended to secure to a defendant arrested some opportunity of having a judicial investigation or inquiry into the regularity of the arrest; and this right ought not to be defeated by such an act on,,the part of the plaintiff. It is provided in section 16, that the plaintiff may, within ten days after the return to him of-the order of arrest and certified copy of the undertaking, serve upon the sheriff a notice that he does not *225accept tbe bail; and unless be gives that notice tbe bail will be deemed to have been accepted after tbe expiration of tbe ten days, and the sheriff exonerated from liability. And it seems to us it would be the most reasonable construction of tbe statute, to bold, in case actual justification becomes unnecessary and tbe bail is perfected either by acceptance or lapse of time, that tbe defendant should have tbe right to move to vacate tbe order of arrest at least at any time before the expiration of tbe ten days within which tbe plaintiff might give notice that he did not accept. This, we think, ought to be the rule, unless the defendant, within that period, voluntarily takes some deliberate step in the cause from which it can fairly be assumed that he intended to waive any irregularity in the order of arrest. The only act relied upon here to show a waiver is, that the defendants gave notice of retainer and demand of a copy of the complaint; but it does not even appear that this was done before notice of motion to vacate the order of arrest was given. Both notices were given upon the same day; but which was first in order of time is not shown. And we are therefore, under the circumstances, relieved from deciding the question whether the defendants would subsequently have the right to move to vacate the order of arrest, where it plainly appeared that they had previously served notice of retainer and demanded a copy of the complaint. If that act should be deemed equivalent, under the statute, to an actual justification — a point which we do not wish to be understood as affirming,— still, upon the record it is impossible to say that even that was done before notice of motion to set aside the order of arrest was given. We consequently think there is no ground for holding that the defendants had waived their right to move to vacate the order.
And this leads us to the further inquiry, whether the order of arrest was properly granted upon the affidavit. And we are of the opinion that it was not.
The action is brought to recover damages for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. The affidavit states, in sub*226stance, that the defendants maliciously and without any probable cause made complaint under oath in the municipal court of the city of Milwaukee, against the plaintiff, charging him falsely and maliciously in such complaint, and without probable cause, with the crime of willful perjury, and thereby and thereon procured a warrant to be issued out of said court for the arrest of the plaintiff upon said charge, upon which warrant the plaintiff was arrested and imprisoned for the space of two hours and upwards in the hands of the officer, and was obliged to and did give bail, in the sum of $1,000, to save himself from going to prison; that afterwards, on or about the 20th of August, 1872, the plaintiff was brought before the.said court, and examined upon the charge maliciously and falsely set forth in the complaint, and thereupon, on motion of plaintiff’s counsel, the complaint was quashed for insufficiency, and the plaintiff was discharged and fully acquitted, and the prosecution was entirely ended and discharged.
These are the material facts and circumstances stated in the affidavit, from which a want of probable cause on the part of the defendants in instituting the criminal prosecution is to be inferred. And the question is, Are they sufficient to warrant the inference that a probable cause did not exist ? It seems to us not. They show merely that the plaintiff was arrested on a complaint made by the defendants, in which he was charged with having committed the crime of perjury; that he was imprisoned, and gave bail; and that afterwards the court quashed the complaint for insufficiency, and discharged the plaintiff from the arrest; and that no further prosecution for the same offense has been instituted against him. It would doubtless be sufficient to allege in this general manner in a complaint that the arrest was without probable cause; but the affidavit ought to go further, and state facts which are evidence prima facie of want of probable cause. This is the rule contended for by the learned counsel for the defendants; and we think it is correct. Suppose the precise facts stated in the affi*227davit were established by evidence on tbe trial of the action: would they warrant the jury in finding that the defendants acted without probable cause in instituting the criminal proceeding, and that they had no reasonable ground for believing the plaintiff guilty of the offense with which he was charged? It seems to us the jury would not be authorized to say, upon this evidence alone, that there was a want of probable cause. For non constat but that the defendants might have had the very best grounds for believing the plaintiff guilty of the crime imputed to him. The facts and circumstances, therefore, showing a want of probable cause, should be set forth in the affidavit. The rule is well stated by Judge Duer, in Vanderpool v. JTissam, 4 Sandf., 715, where the affidavit for holding to bail, like the one before us, set forth only in general terms the existence of malice and the want of probable cause. He says : “ The facts which are relied on as prima facie evidence of the want of probable cause must be set forth in the affidavit, so as to enable the judge to whom the application for an order of arrest is made, to draw the proper conclusion of law. If such facts are omitted, the party swears only to his own belief, and his opinion, or that of his counsel, is substituted for a judicial decision.” The burden is on the plaintiff to show affirmatively in the affidavit the want of probable cause, and that there were no reasonable grounds to warrant the defendants in charging him with the crime of perjury. This the affidavit fails to show, and for this reason it is insufficient.
On the hearing of the motion to vacate the order of arrest, the plaintiff offered to amend the affidavit by adding to and inserting therein the facts which were evidence prima facie of want of probable cause. The court refused to permit the amendment to be made. In this the court was' manifestly right. The insufficiency in the affidavit could not be cured so as to make valid the order already granted.
By the Court.— The order of the county court is affirmed.