{
  "id": 1503956,
  "name": "Harr v. Ward",
  "name_abbreviation": "Harr v. Ward",
  "decision_date": "1904-12-24",
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  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
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    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "Harr v. Ward."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Battue, J.\nJoshua Ward sued J. A. Harr, P. H. Foley and S. L. Harr for damages caused by a malicious prosecution. The defendants recovered a judgment against the plaintiff, and he appealed to this court. During the pendency of the appeal he died, and the action was revived by consent in the names of G. W. Ward and J. T. Ward, as administrators of his estate. The judgment was reversed, and the cause was remanded to the circuit court. In the circuit court the plaintiffs recovered judgment against the defendants, and they have appealed.\nOn or about the nth day of October, 1894, appellants, J. A. Harr and P. H. Foley, brought an action against Joshua Ward, in the circuit court of the Southern District of Prairie County, to recover $872.50, alleging that Ward was indebted to them in that sum for selling lands for him. At the commencement of this action an affidavit was filed, showing that Ward was a nonresident of the State of Arkansas. A bond with appellant S. L. Harr surety thereon was also filed. An order of attachment was thereupon sued out in the action, and certain land of Ward was seized under the same to secure the debt. Ward finally recovered judgment. He thereupon brought this action against appellants for damages occasioned by the former, alleging that the prosecution thereof was malicious and without probable cause.\nAppellants contend that \u201cthe law authorized Harr and Foley to bring suit against Ward as a nonresident; that the seizure of the land was not unlawful because Ward was a nonresident; and that the bringing of the suit was not a legal wrong, and the appellees cannot recover in this action.\u201d But they are in error. They had no right to sue out an order of attachment without a valid cause of action to sustain it. If they did so, without good reason to believe that Ward was indebted to them, and seized his property under the attachment with the view of forcing him to pay them something, they subjected themselves to the penalties of the law for malicious prosecution. Lemay v. Williams, 32 Ark. 166, 175.\nAppellants say, \u201cno malice was shown.\u201d There was evidence adduced in the trial tending to show that Ward was not indebted to them in any sum, and that the action was commenced and the order of attachment was sued out for the purpose of forcing him to pay something to save his property from sale. This was sufficient to show malice. Lemay v. Williams, supra; Foster v. Pitts, 63 Ark. 387.\n. They say that they brought the action \u201cupon the advice of lawyers learned in the law, and they are not subject to the penalties sought to be enforced upon them in this action.\u201d They had the right to ask the advice of counsel, and to rely and act upon it. But, before they act upon it, they should lay before him (counsel) a full and fair statement of the facts relevant to the prosecution. They must honestly and in good faith act upon the advice given. But this advice \u201cdoes not necessarily establish a conclusive presumption against malice and in favor of a probable cause.\u201d Before it can become effectual, it' remains for the jury to determine \u201cwhether the party has fairly and fully communicated to his counsel the facts within his knowledge and used reasonable diligence to ascertain the truth, as also whether he acted in good faith upon the advice received from counsel.\u201d 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.), pp. 899, 906, 907, and cases cited. That question was fairly submitted to the jury in this case, and decided against appellants.\nAttorney\u2019s fees, and expenses of attending court, paid by Ward in defending against the action brought against him by Harr and Foley, are elements of the damage recoverable in this action. 4 Sutherland on Damages (3d Ed.), \u00a7 \u00a7 1237, 1238, and cases cited.\nThe signing of the bond for attachment by S. E. Harr was not sufficient to subject him to the penalties of a malicious prosecution, and this was all the evidence against him. See Sneeden v. Harris, 109 N. C. 349.\nReversed as to S. E. Harr, and affirmed as to the other appellants.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Battue, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "M. J. Manning, for appellants.",
      "H. A. & J. R. Parker, for appellees."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "Harr v. Ward.\nOpinion delivered December 24, 1904.\n1. Malicious prosecution \u2014 when lies. \u2014 One who maliciously sues out a writ of attachment against a nonresident without a valid cause of action to sustain it subjects himself to the penalties of the law for malicious prosecution. (Page 439.)\n2. Same \u2014 proof of malice. \u2014 Evidence that the plaintiff in an attachment suit, knowing that defendant was not indebted to him, brought suit to force him to pay something to save his property from sale, is sufficient to prove malice. (Page 439.) \u2022\n3. Same \u2014 advice of counsel as defense. \u2014 The fact that a prosecution alleged to have been malicious was brought upon the advice of counsel is not a good defense to the party who prosecuted it, unless it appears that he fairly and fully communicated to his counsel the facts within his knowledge, and used reasonable diligence to ascertain the truth, and-that he acted in good faith upon the advice received from counsel. (Page 439.)\n4. Same \u2014 ELEMENTS of damage. \u2014 Attorney\u2019s fees and expenses of attending court paid by the defendant in a malicious prosecution are elements of the damage recoverable in an action for such malicious prosecution. (Page 440.)\n5. Same \u2014 signing attachment bond. \u2014 The mere signing of an attachment bond as surety is not sufficient to subject one to the penalties of a malicious prosecution. (Page 440.)\nAppeal from Monroe Circuit Court.\nGeorge M. Chapuine, Judge.\nReversed.\nM. J. Manning, for appellants.\nThe appellees cannot recover. Cooley, Torts, 207. No malice is shown. 61 N. W. 359; 98 U. S. 494. Appellants are not subject to the penalties sought to be enforced. Cooley, Torts, 21 x; 34 Ala. 91; 4 Fed. 602; 61 N. W. 359; 98 U. S. 192; 50 Pac. 606. An attachment against the property of a npnresident is an action in personam. 25 Ark. 144. Attorneys\u2019 fees and expenses in defending suit are not reasonable, even though the suit on the debt fails. 19 N. W. 282; 20 So. 1012; 36 N. W. 713. Appellees\u2019 personal expenses are not recoverable. 51 Ark. 384.\nH. A. & J. R. Parker, for appellees.\nThere was legal malice in bringing the attachment suit. Waples, Attach. 449, 450; 12 Pick. 324; 5 Mason, 192; 4 Bing. 190. The creditor must act honestly in bringing the suit. 19 N. W. 282; Drake, Attach. \u00a7 \u00a7 174, 176. All the natural and proximate results of the act complained of will be considered as elements of damages. 1 Sutherland, Dam. 127, 128, 174. The injured party ought to be put in the same position, so far as can be. 96 Ark. 439; 71 Ark. 350."
  },
  "file_name": "0437-01",
  "first_page_order": 459,
  "last_page_order": 462
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