Dorendinger v. Tschechtelin

12 Daly 34
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 Daly 34 (Dorendinger v. Tschechtelin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorendinger v. Tschechtelin, 12 Daly 34 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

—This action was brought by the plaintiff against the defendant for a mali[36]*36cions prosecution, the malicious prosecution relied upon being also an action for malicious prosecution brought by the defendant against the plaintiff, in which the plaintiff was arrested upon an order of arrest, which order, upon the application of the defendant in that action and the plaintiff in this, was vacated, and the action was afterwards dismissed for want of .prosecution.

It was incumbent upon the plaintiff in this action to show by affirmative evidence that the previous action for malicious prosecution was brought against him without probable cause ; which, where the facts are uncontradicted, is a question of law (Bulkley v. Keteltas, 6 N. Y. 384).

To prove the want of probable cause, the plaintiff, Dorendinger, gave in evidence the order upon which he was arrested in the previous action, and the affidavit of Tschechtelin, the plaintiff in that action, upon which the order was founded. Dorendinger, who was examined as a witness, testified to the fact of his arrest; that he was in the custody of the sheriff for three hours; the expense to which he was put thereby; and that he made an affidavit on the motion to vacate the order of arrest, as to whether he had anything to do with obtaining the defendant Tschechtelin’s arrest. Dorendinger’s counsel then gave in evidence the order to show cause why the order of arrest should not be vacated, and seven affidavits, upon which the motion .was made. It is said in the case that he also gave in evidence the order vacating the order of arrest, but it does not appear in the case. He also gave in evidence an order dismissing the previous action for want of prosecution, and the judgment entered up to that effect against Tschechtelin, adjudging costs in the action to Dorendinger; upon which evidence the plaintiff rested.

The fact that that action was dismissed for want of prosecution was not, of itself, sufficient evidence of the want of probable cause (Sinclair v. Eldred, 4 Taunt. 7), though it would be prima facie evidence, if the action had been voluntarily discontinued (Burhans v. Sanford, 19 Wend. 417).

Nor would the fact that the order of arrest was vacated, [37]*37of itself, be sufficient evidence of a want of probable cause, as the action could still be prosecuted, the only effect of that order being to release Dorendinger from arrest pending the action.

Nor could the affidavits upon which he moved for the order vacating the arrest be received in this action as proofs of the facts alleged in them. If they could even have been received to show the grounds upon which the order of arrest was vacated, which is questionable, they did not show it, for several grounds are enumerated in the order to show cause, and as the order vacating the arrest is not in the case, it does not appear upon what ground the defendant was discharged from the arrest. But the defendant allowed these affidavits to be given in evidence without objection, so that the jury were entitled to take them into consideration; and the facts alleged in them would, if uncontradicted, be satisfactory evidence of a Want of probable cause for bringing the action for a malicious prosecution, as they state that Dorendinger made no charge at the Eldridge Street Police Station against Tschechtelin on the 22d of March, 1882, as alleged in the affidavit upon which the order of arrest was granted; that the only charge upon which Tschechtelin was arrested and detained that day was a charge of assault and battery, preferred by one Charles Honegger against him. That this was corroborated by what appeared upon the examination of the record or blotters kept in the Eldridge Street'Police Station and the Third District Police Court, in which the charge made by Honegger is recorded, and upon which there is no entry of any charge made by Dorendinger against Tschechtelin for any cause whatever. And it further appeared by these affidavits that a fraud was perpetrated, alike upon the court and the sureties who signed the undertaking given upon the arrest, who were procured by Tschechtelin, and who, in his presence and by the instrumentality of his attorney and of a notary, were induced to sign the undertaking in ignorance of its contents, and to sign the affidavits taken by the notary, which were false, [38]*38the sureties having no pecuniary means whatever, being wholly worthless.

The fact of bringing an action for an alleged criminal prosecution, which Dorendinger had never instituted, of which there was no record at the police station or the police courts, and fraudulently procuring such an undertaking to enable Tschechtelin in that action to obtain an order for the arrest of Dorendinger, was ample evidence of a want of probable cause for the action; and for the inference which a jury may draw from the want of probable cause, that it was brought maliciously. There was the affidavit on which the order of arrest was made, alleging that Dorendinger caused Tschechtelin to be arrested and locked up in the Eldridge Police Station on a charge of having robbed him of a gold watch, and the affidavit of Dorendinger, denying that any such charge had been made by him, which denial was corroborated by affidavits made by two other persons. Testimony of this description, in the form of affidavits, was of a very unsatisfactory kind in an action of this nature; but as the defendant allowed it to come in without objection, the jury were entitled to consider it.

The evidence on the part of the defendant, in answer to this presumptive ease of the want of probable cause, was of a weightier character, being the oral evidence of witnesses who could be and were subjected to cross-examination, and which, as they were evidently believed, fully justified the jury in finding a verdict for the defendant. It was that such a charge was made at the police station; that Dorendinger was the leader in an outrageous assault made by him and two or three associates upon Tschechtelin, in his bar-room, in which they tore his watch out of his pocket, and during which Dorendinger went out on the sidewalk, called the police and told them to arrest Tschechtelin, which they did, and brought him to the police station, Avhere Dorendinger made the charge that Tschechtelin had stolen his Avatch, and the defendant Avas locked up in the station house until the folloxving morning, when he was discharged. It was evidence showing that Tschechtelin [39]*39had every reason to believe that he had been arrested and incarcerated upon a criminal charge made by Dorendinger, and if this was the case, the previous action was not one maliciously brought without probable cause (Seibert v. Price, 5 Watts & S. 438; Foshay v. Ferguson, 2 Denio 617), for the charge made, whether it be the foundation of a criminal prosecution or of a civil action, must be shown to have been wilfully false (Cohen v. Morgan, 6 Dowl. & R., 8; Johnson v. Sutton, 1 Term 540; 2 Greenleaf Evid. 453), to establish that want of probable cause, the inference and natural conclusion from which is that che.criminal prosecution or civil suit was maliciously brought.

In the course of the trial the defendant, upon cross-examination, testified that he lived in a lodging-house kept by a woman whom he named. He was asked whether she was a friend of his, and the question was excluded under the plaintiff’s exception.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Daly 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorendinger-v-tschechtelin-nyctcompl-1883.