The judgment in the first action is conclusive upon two points: (1) That this defendant had no cause of action against the plaintiff; (2) that he had no real ground to cause the plaintiff’s arrest. Presumptively, the defendant acted in good faith, and therefore the plaintiff here had to show want of probable cause. Whether there was evidence touching that question was for the trial court to decide. *870If so, and if susceptible of an inference either way, it was for the jury to draw the proper inference, unless there was- such a lack of evidence in support of a want of probable cause that a verdict for the plaintiff should not stand. Anderson v. How, 116 N. Y. 348, 22 N. E. 695.
The testimony upon this trial was to the effect that the plaintiff, as agent or broker for the defendant, who was a coal dealer, procured various orders for coal to be filled by the defendant under a contract for a reasonable compensation therefor, and that he collected several of these bills, and paid over the money to the defendant thereon, except as to a few of the bills,' the amount of which he retained, and had, as the court held in the first action, the right to retain, as compensation for his services. The plaintiff procured some' orders upon which the defendant was unwilling to allow commissions, because they were from his regular customers, and some orders that the defendant did not fill, because he was under the impression that the plaintiff had retained money which he ought to have paid over. The plaintiff wanted 25 cents per ton for the orders he procured, and 5 per cent, for the money he collected; the defendant thought 12-} cents per ton for the orders was enough, and that no charge should be made for collections. Thus differences arose between the parties. The evidence is conflicting as to the defendant’s knowledge of the amount of the orders obtained by the plaintiff. The defendant had the impression that the plaintiff was withholding moneys he ought to pay over. How far that was the plaintiff’s fault or his own depends upon the inferences to be drawn from conflicting testimony. There was no evidence that this plaintiff was not responsible, or that he rendered a false account, and the former judgment is conclusive that he did not wrongfully retain any money.
We cannot say that the jury might not infer that the defendant, in prosecuting the plaintiff, and in causing his arrest, was rash, hasty, and passionate, and that he did so to force him to a settlement upon his own terms, right or wrong. Probable cause is defined as such a state of facts and circumstances as would lead a man of ordinary prudence, acting conscientiously, impartially, reasonably, and without prejudice upon the facts within his knowledge, to believe that the person accused is guilty. Heyne v. Blair, 62 N. Y. 12, 22. We think the evidence bore upon just that test. Whether under it the defendant was in fault was a question for the jury. Whether, if the facts had been as charged by the defendant, an order for arrest should have been granted, we need not say, because, as the facts actually were, he was not entitléd to such an order, and because the evidence will not justify the finding that he knew that the facts charged by him did not entitle Mm to the order. Whether they did was for the judge to decide to whom he applied for the order. No motion was made to vacate. Because of the order, the charge here is not false imprisonment, but malicious prosecution; that is, the malicious and inexcusable use of legal process to plamtiff’s injury. If the defendant had probable cause, he was excusable; otherwise, not. The evidence bore upon that question, and the jury should have been permitted to solve it.
Judgment reversed, new trial granted, costs to abide the event. All concur.