Craushaw v. McAdoo

47 Misc. 420, 94 N.Y.S. 386
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 Misc. 420 (Craushaw v. McAdoo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craushaw v. McAdoo, 47 Misc. 420, 94 N.Y.S. 386 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

These plaintiffs aslc temporary injunctions restraining the police in the borough of Manhattan from interfering.with them. They allege unlawful trespass on their premises, forcible entry, the posting of policemen in front of plaintiff’s premises, and interference with persons visiting plaintiffs for lawful purposes. The police deni' that they have trespassed or used force except in the cases of Iiowley and Johnson, where they say 'they made arrests for alleged violation of section 351 of the Penal Code relating to pool selling and they justify their visits to the plaintiffs’ premises by allegations that they are performing a duty enjoined on them by the Greater New York Charter, section 351, to inspect places having excise licenses and gambling houses. They allege that each of the plaintiffs maintains premises which are on some list maintained by the police as places where it is suspected that the law is violated and they say they are actuated only by lawful motives and by a desire to do their duty.

This form of action has become quite frequent of late. There is no dispute about the law; there is no question as to the right of the citizen to apply to the court to enjoin trespass [422]*422and wrongful interference with his property. Wrongful and illegal trespass by public officers is peculiarly obnoxious to our system of government and, if proven, merits the severest condemnation. Every citizen is directly interested in preventing it.

These cases come before the court on motions, on affidavits for injunctions pending trial. The defendants, police officers, deny the facts alleged in the complaint and moving papers. Applications for preliminary injunctions are governed by principles of law as well established as the principles which the plaintiffs assert as the basis for their actions. “ The granting of a temporary injunction is, to a very considerable extent, discretionary with the court, and in cases where the action is brought to obtain a permanent injunction, so that, in effect, a temporary injunction gives to the plaintiff all the remedy to which he would be entitled if he had finally succeeded in the action, it is not, by any means, a matter of course to grant a temporary injunction, unless the right of the plaintiff is clear and the injury inflicted upon him by the act sought to be restrained is irreparable. If there is doubt as to the right of the party, or whether the defendant is overstepping the powers which the law gives him, or whether the plaintiff is in such a situation that he is entitled to equitable relief, the arm of' the court will not be stretched out to aid the plaintiff and to give him, during the pendency of the action, all the relief which he seeks and ma.y obtain by a final judgment.” Weiss v. Herlihy, 23 App. Div. 608. The principle here announced is familiar; it is applicable to this kind of suit in equity as well as to all cases where the plaintiff, in advance of a trial on the merits, where he and his witnesses are produced in court and examined and cross-examined and where the defendant is also before the court, seeks to obtain preliminary relief, notwithstanding the issue raised.

Each case depends upon its own facts. Each case as presented requires careful examination by the court so as to avoid doing wrong to the plaintiff by denying him an injunction and to the defendant by interfering with his rights. Public officers must not violate the law, and at the same [423]*423time, from the very necessity for their existence, they have certain obligations and duties in the lawful performance of which we are all interested. In the end, it seems to me that each of these cases reduces itself to very simple limits. On the argument I referred to the necessity of good faith on the part of these plaintiffs when they come into equity. In the Weiss case cited, Mr. Justice Barrett, in his dissenting opim ion, said: The plaintiff’s good citizenship and general morality have nothing to do with the concrete point presented for consideration. His equities are not founded upon personal qualities or character, nor is he required, as a condition of obtaining equitable relief, to prove his innocence of the charges which induced the defendant to violate his rights. He must, it is true, come into a court of equity .with clean hands; that is, with clean hands quoad the very cause of action alleged. If he does this, he fulfills the maxim although in the abstract he may be persona non grata. In equity, as well as in law, all men are equal.”

I think this is the all important question rvhere the plaintiff comes into court asking a temporary injunction; is he acting in good faith, does he come into court with clean hands quoad the very cause of action alleged? And so, as stated on the argument, no matter what these plaintiffs may have been, and no matter what the premises may have been, if they present an honest case they are entitled to relief. But if, disregarding the charges or suspicions of the police, the plaintiff’s story lacks this important element, if it appears "that he is masquerading and attempting to deceive the court as to- his occupation or the character of his premises, seeking to obtain the writ of this court by deceit and tick, his action is almost as bad as the unlawful oppression which he charges against the defendants.

How with these principles in mind, and I refer to them with some hesitation — there is nothing new in what has been stated — but because of the earnestness of the learned counsel who represents all these plaintiffs, no matter in what part of the borough of Manhattan they may be located, I proceed to the individual cases presented.

Oraushaw says he is a dealer in teas and coffees, carrying [424]*424on an honest legitimate business at No. 57 Bowery; that he supplies hotels and merchants in the vicinity and that he is absolutely ignorant of wrong doing or of any reason for .police interference. Iiis tea and coffee salesroom is on the second floor of a building on the east side of the Bowery, between Bayard and Canal streets, over a liquor store which apparently occupies the full width of the ground floor. Plaintiff’s counsel, at the request of the court, personally examined the premises and makes oath that the salesroom consists of a large room with a great number of chairs, pictures or photographs on the walls, six chests said to contain tea and a number of trays containing coffee and tea. There is a room adjoining occupied by the keeper of the saloon on the first floor; the defendants say he is the tenant of the entire premises. The hotels referred to as his customers are so called Raines Law ” hotels in the vicinity. There is no charge that the police “ occupy ” the premises as in Hale v. Burns, 101 App. Div. 101. It is claimed that they visit the place, which they admit, saying that policemen in plain clothes go there at times to inspect the premises. Plaintiff says they caution people not to go to his place—■ that a policeman was stationed at times in front of his premises who interfered with people who desired to visit him — this the defendants deny. They have no right to caution people against going to plaintiff’s room or to station a policeman permanently in front of his place. They have no right to interfere with his visitors as long as the law is not violated. They have no right to harass or annoy him by unreasonable or unnecessary inspections.

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Related

Brighton Athletic Club v. McAdoo
47 Misc. 432 (New York Supreme Court, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
47 Misc. 420, 94 N.Y.S. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craushaw-v-mcadoo-nysupct-1905.