Davids v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad

45 Misc. 208, 92 N.Y.S. 220
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 Misc. 208 (Davids v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davids v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad, 45 Misc. 208, 92 N.Y.S. 220 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Crane, J.

This action was brought to recover damages from the defendant for an alleged assault committed upon the plaintiff by the defendant’s conductor. Upon the trial a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant and thereafter judgment for costs entered against the plaintiff, and upon this judgment, execution against his property being returned unsatisfied, an execution was issued against his person under which he was arrested and- is now upon the jail limits. This motion is made to vacate the order of arrest.

There is no question but that prior to 1831, by the Revised Statutes, execution might issue against the body of a [209]*209judgment debtor irrespective of the nature of the claim upon which the judgment was recovered."

By chapter 300 of the Laws of 1831, known as the “ Still-well act,” there was excepted from this general provision for body execution judgments founded upon contract and debts arising therefrom, but it did not except claims based upon wrongs affecting contracts, person or property.

' By the Code of Procedure the right to arrest was embodied in section 179 thereof and read as follows: The defendant may be arrested as hereinafter prescribed for the following causes; 1. in an action for recovery of damages, on a cause of action not arising out of contract, where the defendant is not a resident of the State, or is about to remove therefrom; or where the action is for an injury to person or character, or for injuring or for wrongfully taking, detaining or converting property.”

In the Laws of 1876, chap. 448, section 549 of the present Code of Civil Procedure was enacted and read as follows: “A defendant may be arrested in an action as prescribed in this title, where it appears from the complaint that the action is brought for any of the following causes, * * *, to recover damages for a personal injury.”

By chapter 449 of the same laws, “ personal injury ” was stated to include libel, slander, criminal conversation, seduction and malicious prosecution; also an assault, battery, false imprisonment or other actionable injury to the person, either of-the plaintiff of of another. Code Civ. Pro., § 3343, subd. 9.

It will be noticed that prior to 1876, the defendant could be arrested in an action for injury to the person or character, whereas by the present Code, reading into section 549 the definition of personal injury, the defendant can now be arrested in an action brought for libel, slander, criminal conversation, seduction, malicious prosecution, also an assault, battery, false imprisonment or other actionable injury to the person, either of the plaintiff or of another.

The question now arises can the defendant be arrested in an action for negligence or assault where the act causing the injury is not his own act but that of his servant, unauthor[210]*210ized by him, but which by law is imputed or construed to be his act ? There can be but little doubt that a plain and ordinary reading of the words in the sections above quoted, especially in view of what the law had been, would include a right to arrest in actions for such imputed or constructive negligence or assault, but yet the consequences of such a reading of the words would seem to indicate that the right to arrest in these cases was not intended by the Legislature.

The man who employs a servant to drive or to do any act in his business may be liable civilly to respond in money damages for the negligent act of that servant, although the act was never authorized and the master could not have prevented it; but the hardships imposed upon him by arrest and imprisonment under a body execution issued upon a judgment recovered for such acts are as great, if not greater, than formerly suffered and endured by those imprisoned for mere debt, and against which hardships there arose, prior to 1831, such universal opposition.

A man who is imprisoned for debt incurred, in the majority, of cases, has had the benefit of the thing or matter for which the liability arose; but the man arrested for the negligent act of his servant has had no benefit from the negligence, except in very peculiar cases, and has had no option about incurring the liability unless he should cease from the employment of agents or servants.

Now it will be said that this is a matter for the Legislature to deal with and not the courts, and that as the Legislature may enact imprisonment for any kind of debt, it has only excepted contract debts from the general rule. But the fact that rarely, if ever, has the defendant been arrested under a body execution in a case where a judgment was recovered for the negligence or acts of his servants, so far as I have been able to ascertain either from the reports or elsewhere, would lead me to the conclusion that an entirely different construction had been placed upon these statutes by the courts and the members of the bar.

In other words that the personal injury for which an order of arrest may be issued in a civil case has been and should be construed to mean an injury flowing from the defendant’s [211]*211own act and not an injury caused by the act of another which the law imputes to him.

The reading of subdivision 9, section 3343 of the Code of Civil Procedure, would indicate, as suggested by Judge Johnson in the case of Lasche v. Dearing, 23 Misc. Rep. 722, that some division was intended among personal injury actions.

When section 549 gave the right to arrest in personal injury cases, there was hardly any need for specifying assault, battery and false imprisonment as a personal injury, for these have always been such. It would seem absurd to define personal injury as assault, battery, false imprisonment or any other personal injury for which an action would lie. Of course, if it was not an actionable injury, no suit could be brought and there could be no judgment recovered, much less an order of arrest issued. It would seem, therefore, in order to give any meaning at all to this definition of “ personal injury,” that the words “ other actionable injury to the person,” used in this subdivision 9, meant other actions like to assault, battery or false imprisonment, or, in other words, an action in which the defendant himself was at fault, in which his personality took some part in the act, an action founded upon something which he personally did or omitted to do, or which he authorized to be done or to be omitted. In this way sense is given to the definition of “ personal injury ” found in this subdivision.

Thus I believe that the law is and has been understood to be that a defendant can be arrested for his own personal neglect or omission amounting to neglect, or for his own act causing injury, either by assault, battery, malicious prosecution or negligence, but that when the action is based upon constructive or imputed negligence or assault he is not liable to arrest.

Apparently the judge in writing the opinion in the case of Lasche against Dearing construed the law to permit arrests only for cases which were willful, placing men on the same footing with women in respect to this matter, but this was too narrow a view to take in "my opinion, as there is a middle ground between the willful act and the act which by [212]*212policy of law is imputed to another, and this middle ground is the personal act which may be either willful, negligent or unintentional, but amounting to personal wrong, negligence, assault or the like.

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Related

Davids v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad
104 A.D. 23 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)
Ossmann v. Crowley
101 A.D. 597 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
45 Misc. 208, 92 N.Y.S. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davids-v-brooklyn-heights-railroad-nycountyct-1904.