Walker v. Camp
Decision Date | 22 April 1886 |
Citation | 27 N.W. 800,69 Iowa 741 |
Parties | WALKER v. CAMP |
Court | Iowa Supreme Court |
Appeal from Blackhawk Circuit Court.
ACTION for malicious prosecution. There was a trial to a jury, and verdict and judgment were rendered for the plaintiff. The defendant appeals.
AFFIRMED.
Boies Husted & Boies, for appellant.
O. C Miller, for appellee.
This case is before us upon a second appeal. The first opinion is reported in 63 Iowa 627.
I. The plaintiff avers that the defendant maliciously, and without probable cause, procured him to be indicted and prosecuted on a charge of grand larceny. The alleged larceny consisted, as is charged, in selling mortgaged personal property, to-wit: a lot of hogs, without the consent of the mortgagee. The plaintiff does not deny that he sold a portion of the mortgaged property, but he claims that he sold it with the consent of the mortgagee. For the purpose of showing the consent, one Saunders Walker, one of the mortgagors, was introduced as a witness, and was asked to state the conversation which took place at the time the mortgage was being drawn. The defendant objected on the ground that consent on the part of the mortgagees that the mortgagors might sell the property would be inconsistent with the terms of the mortgage; and if there was any such parol consent before the mortgage was executed it must be conclusively presumed that it was waived before or at the time of execution. The court overruled the objection, and the witness answered as follows:
An attempt to raise the question of admissibility of evidence to show such parol consent was made upon the former hearing; but, as the question did not appear to arise properly upon the record, it was not determined. Upon the former hearing it appeared that the inquiry was made as to what was said about selling the property which had been mortgaged. The conversation now shown in evidence took place while the mortgage was being drawn. The statute under which the plaintiff was indicted for selling mortgaged property is section 3895 of the Code. By that statute the selling of mortgaged property without the consent of the then holder of the mortgage is made larceny. Before the mortgage was executed it had no existence as a mortgage, and there was no holder at that time. If the defendant gave his consent before the mortgage took effect, he did not give it as holder of the mortgage. This being so, the defendant contends that the plaintiff did not have the consent of the then holder of the mortgage, as the statute provides, in order to justify a sale. But the consent, by its very terms, was given as a continuing consent. It was to continue at least until the act consented to could properly be done, and that was when the hogs should be ready for market. If the consent stood by itself, with nothing to impeach it, it would not be contended for a moment that it did not continue and authorize the sale of the hogs at the time the sale was made. In such case it could not be said that they were sold without the consent of the then holder of the mortgage. We come, then, to the only question which seems to us to present any difficulty, and that is as to whether the rule of evidence relied upon as to the inadmissibility of parol evidence to contradict a written contract is applicable to such a kind of case as this. In answer to this question we have to say that, in our opinion, it is not. The seller of mortgaged property is not to be convicted therefor without a criminal intent. If the consent is such, in whatever way it may be given, that the seller honestly believes that he is authorized to sell the property, his honest act cannot be converted into a criminal one by a technical rule of evidence framed for the protection of civil rights. Most persons, we think, would have done precisely what the plaintiff did if the facts were as the evidence in his behalf tended to show that they were. It may be that he did not account for the proceeds as he should have done. In respect to that we have nothing to say. The charge was that he committed a crime in making the sale. We are not concerned to know what he did afterwards. In our opinion, the court did not err in admitting the evidence.
II. The counsel for the...
To continue reading
Request your trial