Colgan v. Sullivan

109 A. 568, 94 N.J.L. 201, 1920 N.J. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 19, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 A. 568 (Colgan v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colgan v. Sullivan, 109 A. 568, 94 N.J.L. 201, 1920 N.J. LEXIS 167 (N.J. 1920).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kalisck, J.

A verdict was directed in the court below for the defendant, in an action brought against him by tbe plaintiff for malicious prosecution. Judgment having been entered on the verdict the plaintiff appeals.

The facts are briefly these: Leo S. Sullivan, the defendant in the court, below, made complaint in writing in a magistrate’s court of Jersey City, in which complaint Sullivan stated upon information and belief that Thomas J. Colgan, “did utter seditious remarks concerning complainant, he, the complainant, being the chairman of Exemption Board Uo. 1 in the City of Jersey City, hi. J., to wit, he said that complainant had his price, and that he could proA'eit, and also said that he had the goods on said complainant, and that he also said that said complainant did discriminate betAveen certain persons of the draft age;” whereupon a warrant was issued for Colgan’s arrest, Avhieh warrant was not served, [202]*202Colgan having surrendered himself and given bail. The com.plainant subsequently withdrew the charge and made a charge of disorderly conduct against Colgan.

The facts are not in dispute. When such is the case the question whether there was reasonable or probable cause and the defendant actuated by a malicious motive in making the charge becomes a court question. Vladar v. Klopman, 89 N. J. L. 575. On behalf of the appellant it is urged that the characterization of the remarks as “seditious” by the complainant in the criminal complaint was a false characterization for which he must be held liable.

To support this contention, counsel of appellant argues that the alleged words did not constitute the crime of sedition ■or other crime; that the complainant being a lawyer and judge of a criminal court should have known that the words did not violate any criminal statute; that he dictated to the clerk of the court the complaint and demanded a warrant for sedition; that the complainant sought neither the advice of counsel nor did the magistrate designate the crime.

We think, in view of the settled law of this state, that it is of no real importance whether or not the complainant sought the independent advice of a lawyer or relied upon his own legal knowledge of the import of the language used, and dictated the complaint and characterized the language uttered as seditious so long as it appears that the complainant acted in the honest belief at the time he made his complaint .that the words uttered were seditious, and submitted the same to a magistrate for his judgment and judicial action.

In Vladar v. Klopman, supra, Chief Justice Gummere, speaking for this court, at page 576, said: “The fundamental grounds upon wthicli an action for malicious prosecution rests are that it was instituted against the plaintiff without reasonable or probable cause; and that the defendant was actuated by a malicious motive in malting the charge. Unless the evidence in the ease establishes the existence of both these grounds, the plaintiff’s suit must fail.”

It is not pretended in the present case that the defendant did not act in good faith, and in the honest belief that the [203]*203facts set out in the complaint were true, at the time he made ids complaint in the magistrate’s court.

The appellant in order to sustain his contention that there was a prima facie case of want of probable cause and proof of malicious conduct of defendant relies solely upon his assertion that the defendant falsely characterized the words, alleged to have been uttered by the plaintiff, as seditious, whereas the words were not seditions, in that they did not come within the inierdiction of the act of 1918 (Pamph. L., p. 130) under the construction given to that statute in State v. Tachin et al., 92 N. J. L. 269, and affirmed by this court, at the last Juno term. 93 Id. 485.

In this connection counsel of appellant in his brief argues thus: “While it is true that the defendant was informed by Boylan and several of the latter’s friends that the plaintiff uttered Hie words, that evidence did not justify the false characterization of the words as seditions * * * If. the words were used they were unlawful in the sense that they w'ere slanderous, but that did not justify the defendant in characterizing the words as seditious. The false characterization of the alleged words virtually amounted to an intentional and false accusation.”

The. facts of this case clearly distinguish it from McFadden v. Lane, 71 N. J. L. 624, 631, cited by appellant as controlling here, in this respect, that in the case cited the defendant though he knew that MeEadden did not steal the crate of tomatoes, nevertheless charged him with having done so in the complaint made in the magistrate’s court. It was that posture of the ease which led Mr. Justice Pitney to say, at pages 630, 631, in speaking for this court: “It is insisted in this case that the presumption of malice is conclusively rebutted by the fact that the defendant simply laid before the magistrate the facts on which his accusation was based. If Lane had contented himself with charging that MeEadden unlawfully took the crate of tomatoes from the freight-house, that question might perhaps be raised. But when he included in his complaint the charge of larceny, he thereby [204]*204characterized McFadderds act as something more than a mere unlawful tailing, and made himself responsible accordingly.”

It is to be noted here, that, in the case referred to, the evidence showed that Lane had apprised himself of all the facts surrounding the talcing of the crate of tomatoes from the freight-house by McFadden and, therefore, knew or ought to have known that McFadden did not steal the crate, and consequently the statement by Lane in his complaint that McFadden stole the -crate was a willful statement, by the former, of a fact which was untrue.

But an entirely different situation is presented here. The defendant stated in his complaint upon information and belief the language which he was told was uttered by the plaintiff. It is conceded that the defendant received such information. The complaint concluded with a prayer that the plaintiff be dealt with according to law. Nowhere does it appear in the complaint that the plaintiff was charged with a violation of the Sedition act of 1918. Although the remarks were characterized as seditious, this characterization could not have the effect of changing or converting the nature of the remarks into something different from what they indicate, and in this regard the present case differentiates itself in an essential particular from tire McFadden case, supra, in that, the statement in the complaint that McFadden "did unlawfully take one crate of tomatoes,” &c., was materially changed in its character, by adding the statement, "unlawfully did steal, take and carry away.”

The uttering of seditious words is an offence at common law. 1 Bish. New Cr. L. 457, ¶ 2. The cases cited in a note to the text support this statement. Re Crowe, 3 Cox Cr. Cas. 123, was a criminal prosecution for seditious utterances. A fairly comprehensive note on this interesting subject containing references to English and American cases is to be found in 25 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (Ed. 1893) 1008. See 2 Whart. Cr. L. (7th ed.), § 2553, under caption, "Seditious Words.”

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Bluebook (online)
109 A. 568, 94 N.J.L. 201, 1920 N.J. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colgan-v-sullivan-nj-1920.