v.
SMITH
Smith, based his right to recover damages against Hartshorn, for a malicious prosecution, on the ground that on the 24th day of June, 1893, Hartshorn swore out before a magistrate a warrant charging him with the offense of larceny by “stealing six poplar saw-logs of the value of twelve dollars, the property of Harris-Hartshorn Lumber Co.,” etc., and an entry made by the magistrate upon said warrant on July 8, 1893, in the following language: “Upon hearing evidence in this case, the .within warrant is dismissed, the defendant discharged.” The plaintiff alleged that he was arrested under this warrant; that the prosecution was maliciously carried on thereunder and without any probable cause, and that he had been damaged by reason of such malicious prosecution in the particulars outlined in the petition. At the trial, the warrant above referred to was introduced in evidence, but the entry of the magistrate thereon, discharging the accused, was excluded by the court, upon the ground that the entry on the docket of the justice of the peace was the highest evidence of the judgment of the justice, and that the proposed evidence was secondary and inadmissible until the absence of the docket was accounted for. The defendant introduced in evidence an indictment by the grand jury of Floyd superior court, found[*236] at the September term, 1893, against John Smith, for the larceny of six poplar logs, the property of the Harris-Hartshorn Lumber Company, of the value of twelve dollars; and it was not denied that the six poplar logs referred to in the indictment were the same as those referred to in the warrant previously issued. The defendant also introduced in evidence a verdict rendered in the city court of Floyd county, to which court the case arising under the indictment had been transferred by the' judge of the superior court. This verdict was rendered at the March term of the city court, and was as follows: “We, the jury, find the defendant guilty, and recommend him to the mercy of the court.” The plaintiff then introduced in evidence the remittitur from the Supreme Court in the case of John Smith v. The State, showing that the verdict of guilty in the city court had been set aside and a new trial granted. Smith testified, that he had been arrested under the warrant; that there was a trial on that warrant, and he was discharged; that he did not steal the poplar logs as charged in the indictment. Upon this state of facts, the court directed a verdict for the defendant, and afterwards, upon the hearing of a motion for a new trial filed by the plaintiff, ordered that such verdict be set aside and a new trial granted “upon the ground that the court erred in rejecting the entry of the justice of the peace upon the warrant, discharging the defendant, John, Smith; and upon the further ground that, with or without this entry in evidence, the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant, and in not submitting the case to the determination of the jury.” To this order, setting the verdict aside and granting a new trial, the defendant excepted.
As before said, if a criminal prosecution has been dismissed with no intention of commencing it again, or if delay has been made in commencing the prosecution again, so as to lead the accused to believe that it has been finally terminated, and if he then and at once commences his action for a malicious prosecution, he might probably maintain the same. But, in all reason, he should not be allowed to maintain such an action when substantially the same criminal prosecution as the one upon which he founds his action is still in the courts undisposed of. Newell on Mal. Pros. 331; Marbourg v. Smith, 11 Kas. 554, 562; Schippel v. Norton, 38 Kas. 567. In the latter case it was held that: “Where a criminal prosecution is commenced before a justice of the peace, and is afterwards dismissed with the intention of commencing it again in the district court, and on the same day it is commenced in the district court, . . such criminal prosecution before the justice of the peace can not constitute the basis of an action for a ma[*238] licious prosecution while the criminal prosecution is still pending in the district court.” So we think, under the facts of the present case, the discharge of the accused by the magistrate was not a termination of the prosecution, but that the indictment of the accused in Floyd superior court, and the trial had thereunder in the city court of Floyd county, was a continuation of the original prosecution.
[*239] In actions for malicious prosecution, the question is, not whether the plaintiff was guilty, but whether the defendant had reasonable cause to so believe — whether the circumstances were such as to create in the mind of the defendant a reasonable belief that there was probable cause for the prosecution. Johnson v. Miller, 63 Iowa, 529. Probable cause is defined to be the existence of such facts and circumstances as would excite the belief in a reasonable mind, acting on the facts within the knowledge of the prosecutor, that the person charged was guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted. 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. 24, and authorities cited. The inquiry, therefore, being whether there was probable cause for instituting the prosecution, we hold, in the language of the court in the case of Griffis v. Sellars, 2 Dev. & B. (N. C.) 492, that after a, conviction by verdict, followed by sentence, it ceases to be a matter of conjecture, of argument and of reasoning, whether guilt could rationally be inferred from the facts admitted or proved; for such a state of things can not occur but after full defense by the accused, with deliberation by the jury, aided by the court, upon all the evidence, as well explanatory as negative, offered by the accused; and after all that, guilt was in fact inferred by a numerous body of men of competent understanding and integrity, and the court was also satisfied with it. As evidence of probable cause, a conviction by verdict and judgment is as convincing and therefore ought in law to be as high and conclusive, although vacated by appeal, as if it stood unreversed and in full force. It sanctions the prosecution in its origin and progress through that court, and is the highest evidence, namely a judicial sentence of record, that apparently the accused was guilty. It is true that the law, in its benignity, allows the convict to show, on appeal to another court, that he is really not guilty. But that does not show, nor can it be shown against the facts of the first verdict and judgment, that there was no just and probable cause of accusation. To same effect see Phillips v. Kalamazoo, 53 Mich. 33; Welch v. Boston etc. R. Co., 14 R. I. 609; Newell on Mal. Pros. 291, and authorities cited; Whitney v. Peckham, 15 Mass. 242; Payson v. Caswell, 22 Me. 212; Witham v. Gowen, 14 Me. 362; Womack v. Circle, 32 Gratt. 324; Sev[*240] erance v. Judkins, 73 Me. 376; Cooley on Torts, (2d ed.) top page 214.
Reversed.