Gearity v. Strasbourger

133 A.D. 701, 118 N.Y.S. 257, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2252
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 133 A.D. 701 (Gearity v. Strasbourger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gearity v. Strasbourger, 133 A.D. 701, 118 N.Y.S. 257, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2252 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is an action for false arrest and imprisonment and for malicious prosecution. Upon the trial no question Was raised with •respect to the right of the plaintiff to join the two causes of action, nor was any objection taken to their being combined in' one count in the complaint; but after the denial of a motion made by the defendants in the alternative for the dismissal of the complaint or for the direction of a verdict and after an adjournment of the court for tlie purpose of submitting the case to the jury, counsel for the defendants moved that the plaintiff be compelled to elect “whether she is proceeding' on the theory of a false imprisonment or malicious •prosecution.” ' The court denied the motion, and an exception was duly taken, which is now urged as ground of reversal.

Causes of action for false arrest and imprisonment, and for malicious prosecution arising out of the same transaction, are not necessarily inconsistent, and rnay,xtherefore, be joined in one complaint. (Marks v. Townsend, 97 N. Y. 590.) They are, however, separate causes of action and in conformity, to the requirements of the Code of Civil Procedure, (§ 483) should be separately stated and numbered. That objection, however, is waived unless presented before the trial of the action. - The court submitted the case to the jury on a charge which, taken as a .whole, would allow a recovery both for false arrest and imprisonment and for malicious .prosecution, but did not point out for the guidance of the jury the distinction' [703]*703between the two causes of action, and where liability for the one terminated and for the other commenced, or the difference in the measure of damages in the two classes of actions. The attention of the court does not appear to have been drawn to this omission either by a request to charge or an exception to the charge as delivered. There appears to be on the facts presented in the record a cause of action as matter of law against both defendants for falsely arresting and imprisoning the plaintiff, and on that issue the only question for the jury would be the assessment of damages. The charge upon which the. plaintiff was arrested was a misdemeanor. The arrest was by a citizen not an officer. The firm of Steinhardt & Strasbourger conducted a department store at the southwesterly corner of Eighty-sixth street and Third avenue, and the appellant Rosenberg was a salesman in their employ, having charge of the gentlemen’s furnishings department and performing other duties in the nature of superintendence, which gave rise to his being spoken of and referred to by the employees as manager. On the 19th day of January, 1906, the plaintiff entered the store and purchased a spool of silk, for-which she paid cash, and which was delivered to her without being wrapped and which she carried in her hand. According to her testimony it was her intention after making this purchase, to buy a waist, and, with that end in view, she selected one from a table upon which waists were piled and there being no saleslady immediately present, she stepped toward the nearest counter with the waist on her arm for the purpose of paying for it and then discovered that she had lost her pocketbook which she had had a few minutes before when she paid for the spool of silk; that she turned to look for it on the floor and table, and at about this time she was charged by a saleslady with intending to steal the waist, and that notwithstanding her explanation as herein recited, the appellant Rosenberg, who had not been present, but was entering the store, and had been summoned, 2’equired her to accompany him to an upper floor of the building and there turned her over to the custody of a police officer, whom he summoned for that purpose. She was then taken before Magistrate Crane in the Magistrate’s Court for the first division, fifth district, where a formal verified complaint was made against her by Rosenberg, and she was evidently held for trial before the Court of [704]*704Special Sessions, first division, for bail was fixed and she was tried in that court on the sixth day of March thereafter and acquitted. .

The magistraíé held the plaintiff in $100 bail and she was detained in a cell, the location of which is' not given in the record. Doubtless this was pursuant to formal commitment made by the magistrate on the preliminary hearing or arraignment after she pleaded not guilty. After having been confined in this cell from three o’clock in the afternoon of the day she was arrested, which was Friday, until seven o’clock in the morning of the following Monday, she was taken in a police wagon with other prisoners to the Tombs, and there detained until four o’clock in the afternoon, when she was ■ bailed out. Evidence descriptive of the cells in' which plaintiff was confined and of her treatment while in custody, including the transfer from one prison to another and her arraignment and. trial, was received. This bore upon the damages recoverable for malicious prosecution but not for false arrest and imprisonment, but the court was neither requested to limit it nor to. instruct the jury with respect to its bearing on the respective causes of action. If the plaintiff committed, the crime of petit larceny there is no evidence that either of the appellants saw her' commit it. The arrest, therefore, was unlawful. The evidence sufficiently shows that the authority to make, the arrest was within the implied, if not. express, authority conferred upon the appellant Rosenberg by the firm, and there is evidence that the members of the firm approved .of the course' which he took, aiid that one of them was present when he' made the charge against the plaintiff and delivered her to the police officer. Both appellants, therefore, were liable for causing the arrest of the plaintiff without a warrant for a misdemeanor which was not committed in their presence. Their liability, however, on a cause of action for false arrest and imprisonment terminated, I think, with the arraignment or preliminary hearing before the magistrate, who as a judicial officer decided that the verified complaint sufficiently charged the plaintiff' with a crime, and duly held her thereon, and, as already stated, presumably formally committed her in default of bail, for the imprisonment from that time on was by due process of law, and for it, although the original arrest was illegal and caused by the appellants, I think they are not responsible in damages in an action for false arrest and imprison • [705]*705inent. (Newman v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 54 Hun, 335; Smith v. B. & F. F. Co., 127 App. Div. 278; Wyatt v. Hill, 71 Vt. 468; Neimitz v. Conrad, 22 Oreg. 164. See, also, Filer v. Smith, 96 Mich. 347; Worden v. Davis, 123 App. Div. 193.)

It is not questioned but that the complaint charged a cause of action for false arrest and imprisonment, and this .evidence relating thereto was submitted to the jury under proper instructions, warranted the verdict for those wrongful acts alone regardless of whether the cause of action for malicious prosecution was well founded. The court in the main .charge only .submitted, 1 think, the question of the liability of the defendants for malicious prosecution., although the nature of the cause of action is not character-' ized. The jury , were instructed that the principal question for them to consider was whether or not ¡Rosenberg acted with probable cause. On the issue of false arrest and imprisonment there was no question of probable cause, the arrest having been made by a citizen and not by a peace officer. (Code Crim. Proc.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A.D. 701, 118 N.Y.S. 257, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gearity-v-strasbourger-nyappdiv-1909.