MALICIOUS PROSECUTION — CONSPIRACY. — In an action charging a defendant with a conspiracy to prosecute the plaintiff for a crime, and a malicious prosecution in pursuance of the conspiracy, the alleged malicious prosecution is the gist of the action.
SUBORNATION OF "WITNESSES — DAMAGES. — Subornation of witnesses to swear falsely against a defendant in a criminal prosecution does not constitute a cause of action by him for damages. The gravamen of the action is the alleged malicious prosecution. The averments of the complaint, with respect to the conspiracy of the defendants, are not of the gist of the action; that lies in the wrongful and damaging act done. (Herron v. Hughes, 25 Cal. 560.) Said Chief Justice Holt, in Savile v. Roberts, 1 Raym. Ld. 378: "An action will not lie for the greatest conspiracy imaginable if nothing be put in execution; but if the party be damaged the action will lie. From whence it follows that the damage is the ground of action." (See also Hutchins v. Hutchins, 7 Hill, 104.)
The averments with respect to the defendants' suborning a witness to swear falsely in the criminal prosecution against the plaintiff do not constitute a cause of action for damages. (Smith v. Lewis, 3 Johns. 157;Homer v. Fish, 1 Pick. 441; Smith v. Lowry, 1 Johns. Ch. 320.) In Smith v. Lewis, the court observed that however just and reasonable it may appear, upon the first view of the proposition, that a man who has by perjury injured another, should be answerable, yet, on a nearer inspection, when the mischiefs resulting from upholding that proposition are considered, the conclusion must be that it would be dangerous in the extreme to sustain the action. In the case of Eyres v. Sedgwicke, Cro. Jac. 601, it became a question whether a person who had made a false affidavit in chancery, whereby the plaintiff was imprisoned by the chancellor, was liable to an action for the injury, and it was held by all the judges except Houghton, that to punish this perjury by an action on the case, under pretense of a false oath, should not be suffered; and Houghton, who differed, admitted that if the defendant had come in by process of law as a witness, it had been otherwise, for then he would have been punishable by indictment. If, as said in Smith v. Lewis, the very person who has committed the supposed injury is not answerable civilly, surely the person procuring it will not be amenable.
These considerations lead to what was first said, that the case at bar can only be regarded as one for malicious prosecution; and as the alleged malicious prosecution occurred in the years 1878 and 1879, and this action was not commenced until September 3, 1883, the court below rightly held the action barred by the provisions of the Statute of Limitations. (Piller v. S. P. R. *Page 491 Co. 52 Cal. 42; Sharp v. Miller, 54 Cal. 329; Wood v. Currey, 57 Cal. 208.)
Judgment affirmed.
*Page 559McKINSTRY, J., and McKEE, J., concurred.