Weinstein v. Gelishansky

Opinion by

Williams, J.,

In an action of malicious prosecution the evidence was that the parties were junk dealers, operating independently; that in April or May of 1915 they went out in Weinstein’s wagon to buy junk and stopped at the place of business of William E. Supplee, who offered to sell a lot of empty bottles. Weinstein agreed to buy them for $10. Gelishansky, upon the request of Weinstein, gave Supplee $5 on account of the purchase, and about two weeks later Weinstein returned, paid the balance, took the bottles away and sold them. Subsequently, Gelishansky, claiming he had bought them, had Weinstein arrested on a charge of obtaining goods under false pretenses. At the hearing before a justice of the peace the case was discontinued upon the payment of half costs by each of the parties.

The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff and the *40court below refused defendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v.

The first assignment of error will not be considered. It raises more than one question and groups the refusal of three points for charge in one assignment, contrary to Eule 14.

The second assignment is to the refusal of judgment n. o. v. The appellant argues that the discontinuance of the prosecution upon the payment of half of the costs by each party is not such a termination of the proceeding before the magistrate as would raise a presumption of want of probable cause and shift the burden of proof to him.

This contention cannot be sustained. A discharge by a magistrate with, or without, a hearing, is prima facie evidence of want of probable cause, and casts upon the defendant the burden of showing probable cause, unless it appears from the plaintiff’s testimony: Heide v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., 40 Pa. Superior Ct. 590; Ritter v. Ewing, 174 Pa. 341. In Murphy v. Moore, 9 Sadler 64, it was held that a criminal proceeding is terminated by the entry of a nolle prosequi. The discontinuance of a prosecution is not strictly a nolle prosequi; it is, however, a termination of the case and a discharge of the prisoner. In Kinsey v. Wallace, 36 Cal. 462, the division of costs was held to be such a termination.

The court left to the jury the question of whether the defendant was actuated by malice in having the plaintiff arrested. Malice is the doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse, and in malicious prosecution by the term malice is meant any indirect motive of wrong. It may be any motive other than that of simply instituting a prosecution for the purpose of bringing a person to justice : Ruffner v. Hooks, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 278. Where one institutes criminal proceedings without probable cause for the purpose of collecting a debt or otherwise coercing the person arrested or sued, he is prima facie guilty of malice: MacDonald v. Schroeder, 214 Pa. 411; *41Squires v. Job, 50 Pa. Superior Ct. 289. Gelishansky, having denied any purpose of serving the ends of justice in instituting the prosecution, the jury might well have found that his motive was to collect what he thought Weinstein owed him.

The judgment is affirmed.