Johnston v. Duke

Decision Date10 July 1969
Docket Number1 Div. 568
Citation224 So.2d 906,284 Ala. 359
PartiesJ. B. JOHNSTON v. Leon G. DUKE, Jr., et al.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

J. B. Johnston, pro se.

Leon G. Duke, Jr., Mobile, pro se.

Calvin S. Byrd and Estelle Byrd, Mount Vernon, pro se.

Allan R. Cameron, Mobile, for appellee Ray D. Bridges.

MERRILL, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendants in an action for malicious prosecution which resulted from the giving of the affirmative charge without hypothesis in favor of the defendants.

Appellant, plaintiff below, filed a complaint against defendants, on July 7, 1967, which purported to seek damages for malicious prosecution. Demurrer was sustained, the complaint was amended, demurrers were refiled and sustained, and the complaint was amended to comply with the Code form and the refiled demurrers were overruled. Defendants filed pleas of the general issue and pleas setting out a settlement agreement dated June 28, 1966. Trial was had on January 15, 1969. Appellant represented himself.

Plaintiff's Exhibit No. 2 was a copy of an opinion of the Alabama Court of Appeals showing that plaintiff-appellant, J. B. Johnston, had been convicted in the Court of General Sessions of Mobile County for the offense of selling, removing, or otherwise disposing of property in violation of Tit. 14, § 364 (disposing of property subject to execution). An appeal was taken to the circuit court and the trial court, without a jury, found appellant guilty as charged and fixed his fine at $500.00. The Court of Appeals was of the opinion that the evidence failed 'to meet the degree of proof required by law for a conviction' and the judgment was reversed and the cause was remanded. The application for rehearing and its overruling were also parts of Exhibit No. 2.

Plaintiff's next witness was the clerk of the circuit court and he was asked to read Exhibit No. 2 to the jury. It then developed from plaintiff's questioning of this witness that plaintiff had filed a motion to dismiss the case following the receipt of the opinion of the Court of Appeals and that the motion had been denied. On cross-examination of the witness, he stated: 'This case (the one remanded by the Court of Appeals) is still pending on the criminal State docket of this Court, and it is now set for trial on February 25, 1969.'

The trial court had explained to appellant that the Court of Appeals had remanded the case and had not rendered it. This was in answer to appellant's contention that the opinion had terminated the case. The trial court called appellant's attention to the necessary allegation in his amended complaint that 'which charge, before the commencement of this action, has been judicially investigated, and said prosecution ended, and the plaintiff discharged.' (Tit. 7, § 223, Form 20.)

The trial court carefully and patiently explained that one of the elements necessary to prove in a malicious prosecution case was the termination of such proceedings in plaintiff's favor, and the court asked appellant numerous times if he could prove that the criminal case had been terminated. No such proof was produced. The jury was instructed to find for the defendants and it retired and returned with the directed verdict. The jury was then polled and dismissed.

Appellant's argument in brief (he represents himself on appeal) is that the giving of the affirmative charge was in conflict with the scintilla rule. The answer is that the rule has no application here because the only question was whether a cause of action had been proved and this was in this case purely a question of law.

In Turner v. J. Blach & Sons, 242 Ala. 127, 5 So.2d 93, it was stated that to authorize the maintenance of a suit for malicious prosecution, the following elements must be shown: (1) the institution or continuation of original judicial...

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6 cases
  • Johnston v. Bridges
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • February 24, 1972
    ...for Byrd, on the equity side of the court, to which a demurrer had been sustained, and that ruling affirmed by the Supreme Court, Johnston v. Duke, 286 Ala. 359; and that in a third case, number 29,045, the issue of malicious prosecution, counted on by J. B. Johnston, is the same cause of a......
  • Barrett Mobile Home Transport, Inc. v. McGugin
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • February 12, 1988
    ...or damage as the result of the prosecution's complaint." In its brief, Barrett refers this Court to the cases of Johnston v. Duke, 284 Ala. 359, 224 So.2d 906 (1969), and Johnson v. Byrd, 279 Ala. 491, 187 So.2d 246 (1966), for the proposition that a plaintiff in a malicious prosecution act......
  • Reynolds Bros. Lumber Co. v. W. S. Newell Const. Co.
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • July 10, 1969
    ... ... Chason, Stone & Chason, Bay Minette, for appellant ...         [284 Ala. 354] Paul W. Brock, Hand, Arendall, Bedsole, Greaves & Johnston, Mobile, for appellees ...         HARWOOD, Justice ...         The plaintiff below, Reynolds Brothers Lumber Company, Inc., ... ...
  • Kroger Co. v. Puckett
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Civil Appeals
    • September 28, 1977
    ...criminal proceeding against appellees was not sufficient to permit their action for malicious prosecution. The case of Johnston v. Duke, 284 Ala. 359, 224 So.2d 906, set out the elements necessary to maintain a suit for malicious prosecution in this jurisdiction. The elements required for s......
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