Malicious prosecution involves the wrongful initiation of legal proceedings without probable cause and with malice, resulting in damages. It balances the principles of bringing criminals to justice and restraining false accusations. Key elements are lack of reasonable cause, malice, favorable termination of proceedings, and damages suffered.
Malicious prosecution involves the wrongful initiation of legal proceedings without probable cause and with malice, resulting in damages. It balances the principles of bringing criminals to justice and restraining false accusations. Key elements are lack of reasonable cause, malice, favorable termination of proceedings, and damages suffered.
Malicious prosecution involves the wrongful initiation of legal proceedings without probable cause and with malice, resulting in damages. It balances the principles of bringing criminals to justice and restraining false accusations. Key elements are lack of reasonable cause, malice, favorable termination of proceedings, and damages suffered.
Malicious prosecution involves the wrongful initiation of legal proceedings without probable cause and with malice, resulting in damages. It balances the principles of bringing criminals to justice and restraining false accusations. Key elements are lack of reasonable cause, malice, favorable termination of proceedings, and damages suffered.
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Malicious Prosecution
• Malicious prosecution is a mode of abuse of legal
process. • Malicious prosecution consists of institution of criminal proceedings in a court of law maliciously and unreasonably and without a proper cause of action. • If a person can show actual damage, he can file an action for damages under the law of torts. • When such prosecution causes actual damage to the party prosecuted, it is a tort for which he can bring an action. • This tort balances two competing principles, namely the freedom that every person should have in bringing criminals to justice and the need for restraining false accusation against innocent persons. • The foundation of the action lies in abuse of the process of the court by wrongfully setting the law in motion and it is designed to Discourage the perversion of the machinery of justice for an improper purpose. Prosecution by the Defendant • It involve two elements, first that the plaintiff was prosecuted and secondly, that the defendant was the prosecutor. • Prosecution means criminal proceedings against a person in a court of law. Nagendra Nath Ray v Basanta Das Bairagya, ILR (1929)47 Cal 25 • A theft had been committed in the defendant's house he informed the police that he suspected the plaintiff for the same. • The plaintiff was arrested by the police but was subsequently discharged by the magistrate. In a suit for malicious prosecution, it was held that it was not maintainable as there was no prosecution at all because mere police proceedings are not the same thing as prosecution. • Prosecution should be made by the defendant. A 'prosecutor' is a person who is actively instrumental in putting the law in force for prosecuting another. • If I tell a policeman that I have had a particular thing stolen from me and that it was seen in X's possession and the policeman without any further instructions on my part makes inquiries and arrests, it is not I who have instituted the prosecution. • In order that a private person can be termed as 'prosecutor' he must've done something more than merely lodging the complaint with the police, he must've been actively instrumental in the proceedings and must've made his best efforts (e.g., procures false evidence) to see that the plaintiff is convicted for the offence. [Martin v Watson (1995)3 All ER 559(HL)] • An investigating officer is not liable unless he was a party to the falsity of the case. • A pathologist preparing a postmortem report or a person appearing merely as a witness cannot be held to be a prosecutor. • A malicious reporter to the police for getting a prosecution launched on the basis of his evidence is within the catch of the principle. Essentials: • i. The proceedings were instituted without any probable or reasonable cause, • ii. Proceedings were filed maliciously and not to book a criminal in a court of law/not with a mere intention of carrying the law into effect, iii. Termination of Proceedings in favour of the Plaintiff, iv. As a result of such prosecution, the plaintiff has suffered damage. Example: • P informed police that a theft has been committed in his house and he suspected that it has been committed by A. A was consequently arrested but was discharged by the magistrate as the final police report showed that A was not connected with the theft. • When A prosecuted P for malicious prosecution, the court dismissed the suit as there was no prosecution in a court of law. To prosecute is to set the law in motion. • Prosecution is not deemed to have commenced before a person is summoned to answer a complaint. Reasonable and probable cause • An honest belief in the guilt of the accused person upon a full conviction, founded upon reasonable grounds of the existence of circumstances, which assuming them to be true, would reasonably lead any prudent man placed in the position of the accused to the conclusion that the person charged was probably guilty of the crime imputed. • There is a reasonable and probable cause when one has sufficient ground for thinking that the other person has committed the offence. Abrath v. N.E.Railway 1833 • ‘M’ had recovered compensation for his injury in a railway collision from the railway Co. Latter on the railway Co. came to know that those injuries were not suffered in the collision but were artificially created by him in collision with one doctor ‘P’. • The railway Co. made inquiries and on legal advice sued P for conspiring with M to defraud the railway Co. ‘P’ was acquitted and he filed an action for malicious prosecution against the railway. It was held that railway Co. had reasonable and probable cause. • The defendant will be deemed to have made reasonable and probable cause when – • (a) he took care to be informed of the facts, • (b) he honestly believed his allegation to be true, and • (c) the facts were such as to constitute a prima facie case. The prosecutor's belief should be based on due enquiry. • The prosecutor should honestly believe in the story on which he acts and in believing in the story he must act like a reasonable prudent man. Malice • Another essential ingredient is malice. Malice means presence of some improper or wrongful motive, intent to use the legal process in question for some other purpose. • e. g. a wish to injure the other party rather than to vindicate law or justice. • Mere acquittal of the plaintiff is no proof of malice. • It may be malice if the person acted in undue haste, recklessly or failed in making proper and due inquiries or in sprit of retaliation or on account of long standing enmity. • Person has been acquitted • The last essential ingredient is that the person has been acquitted or the conclusion of proceeding is in favour of the plaintiff and consequent to it the plaintiff has suffered damage. If proceedings terminate in favour of the plaintiff but he has not suffered any damage, then no action for malicious prosecution lies. • Because of the prosecution one must suffer damage, the damage may be injury to one's fame, reputation. It may also put in danger his life or liberty, or it may result in damage to his property. • The proceedings terminate in favour of the plaintiff if he has been acquitted on technical grounds, conviction has been quashed, or the prosecution has been discontinued. • Even if the plaintiff is convicted by the trial court but the conviction is set aside in appeal, the plaintiff can sue for malicious prosecution. • When the plaintiff is acquitted of the offence for which he is prosecuted but is convicted of a lesser offence, he may still sue for malicious prosecution of the graver offence of which he is acquitted. • No action can be brought when prosecution or the proceedings are still pending. In an action for malicious prosecution, the cause of action arises, not on the date of institution of the proceeding complained of, but when the proceeding terminates in favour of the plaintiff. Distinction between False imprisonment and Malicious Prosecution • False imprisonment is wrongfully restraining the personal liberty of the plaintiff; malicious prosecution is wrongfully setting the criminal law in motion. • In false imprisonment the personal liberty of the plaintiff may have been wrongfully restrained by a private individual or setting a ministerial officer in motion. While in malicious prosecution it is the judicial officer who is set in motion. • Where the inspector did not interpose any discretion of his own between the charge made by A and arrest of B and the arrest followed merely by signing of the charge-sheet by A, A's tort was that of false imprisonment. • Imprisonment is prima facie a tort, malicious prosecution is not. • In an action for false imprisonment, it is the defendant who has to justify the imprisonment, whereas in an action for malicious prosecution the plaintiff has to affirmatively prove the absence of reasonable and probable cause. • The defendant is thus in a more advantageous position in a suit for malicious prosecution as compared to a suit for false imprisonment. • Malice is an essential ingredient in an action for malicious prosecution but not in that of false imprisonment. • It is no defence to an action for false imprisonment that the detention by the defendant was without malice but due to a bona fide mistake.