Marks v. . Townsend

97 N.Y. 590, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 566
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 97 N.Y. 590 (Marks v. . Townsend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marks v. . Townsend, 97 N.Y. 590, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 566 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Earl, J.

The complaint alleges two causes of action, to-wit, one for malicious prosecution and another for false imprisonment. As they are both for personal injuries they could be continued in the same complaint. (Code, § 484.) They are consistent with each other, and the one is not destructive of the other, and it has been common practice to unite them. (Doyle v. Russell, 30 Barb. 300; Barr v. Shaw, 10 Hun, 580; Dusenbury v. Keiley, 85 N. Y. 383, 389; Carl v. Ayers, 53 id. 14; Bradner v. Faulkner, 93 id. 515.) But as the objection to the joinder was not taken in the answer or by demurrer, it was in any event waived. (Code, § 499.) The gist of the action was the procuring of an order of arrest by defendants under the Stillwell Act so called and the arrest of plaintiff thereon.

The warrant of arrest was dismissed and the plaintiff discharged from arrest by the order of the judge who granted the warrant, upon motion of plaintiff and on affidavits showing his previous arrest as hereinafter stated. These defendants appealed from such order to the General Term, and there it was affirmed, and then they appealed to this court. This action was commenced *595 while the appeal was pending in this court. The appeal was afterward dismissed on the ground that this court did not have jurisdiction to hear it. (81 N. Y. 466.) The claim is now made that the prosecution was not terminated so as to warrant an action for malicious prosecution. But within the meaning of the rule which requires that the prosecution should be at an end before an action for malicious prosecution can be instituted, this prosecution was ended. It was held that these defendants were not entitled to the warrant, and the plaintiff was absolutely discharged from arrest. The appeal did not change his status. It had been judicially declared that he had been improperly arrested, and that he was entitled to be discharged; and the order discharging him was final, and the warrant could not be revived. (Dusenbury v. Keiley, supra.) When a party has a final judgment in his favor upon a trial the prosecution is so far terminated that he may sue for malicious prosecution. If an appeal be taken from the judgment, that may furnish a reason for staying the trial of the action for malicious prosecution until the decision of the appeal. If the judgment should be affirmed, then it could not be held that the action was prematurely commenced; if it should be reversed, the action would then again be pending, and that fact would furnish a defense. A party commencing such an action, while an appeal from the decision in his favor is pending, simply takes the risk of an adverse decision upon the appeal and thus suffering defeat in the action.

We think, however, that the plaintiff was properly non-suited, as to the cause of action for malicious prosecution. The burden of showing want of probable cause for his arrest was upon him, and he gave no evidence whatever upon that subject. Eot only this, upon his objection, evidence on the part of the defendants to show probable cause was excluded. He could not maintain that cause of action against the defendants in other respects having good ground for the warrant of arrest by simply showing that their attorneys were mistaken in a technical point of law on account of which the warrant was set aside.

*596 The plaintiff was also properly nonsuited as to his cause of action for false imprisonment. The act (Chap. 300 of the Laws of 1831) under which the warrant was issued in JSTovember, 1878, was not repealed until May 10,1880. (Chap. 245, Laws of 1880.) The facts stated in the affidavit upon which the warrant was issued were sufficient to give the judge who issued it jurisdiction ; and in issuing it he acted judicially and made a judicial determination. The warrant was not, therefore, void or voidable or irregular. It was the result of the regular judicial action of a judicial officer having jurisdiction upon the facts presented to him to issue it. It was subsequently set aside by the judge who issued it, when a new fact, to-wit, that the plaintiff had been before arrested in an action against him by these defendants upon an order of arrest issued in the action for the same cause, and upon substantially the same grounds, was brought to his attention. The existence of this fact did not make the warrant void or irregular. When brought to his attention it furnished the judge a ground for the dismissal of the warrant in the exercise of further judicial action. It matters not whether the warrant was dismissed in the exercise of judicial discretion, or upon the claim by the plaintiff that he could not be twice arrested for the same cause, and hence that he had the absolute legal right to be discharged from the second arrest; it was at most a case where the plaintiff was erroneously arrested. An error was committed, which, upon a proper presentation of the facts, was to be corrected by further judicial action. A warrant, granted under such circumstances, protects against an action for false imprisonment, not only the judge who granted it, but the party who procured it and instigated its service. The case stands no different from what it would have been if the plaintiff had appeared and denied the facts alleged in the affidavit upon whicívthe warrant was based, and had thus procured his discharge upon the merits, or if the defendants, when they applied for the warrant, had disclosed the fact of the prior arrest, and the judge had erroneously decided that they were yet entitled to it, and his decision had upon appeal been reversed; or if when the fact of the prior ar *597 rest was afterward brought to his attention, he had refused to set aside the warrant, and his decision had upon appeal been reversed. If a warrant of attachment or an order of arrest is issued in an action upon facts giving the judge jurisdiction and the defendant appears, and by showing new facts, or denying those alleged against him, procures the attachment or the order to be set aside, the process is not void or voidable, or irregular, but simply erroneous, and protects the judge and the party who procures it, although it is set aside, against an action for trespass or false imprisonment. In all such cases these are regular judicial methods, and that which was legally done at the time cannot be converted into a wrong by relation after the process has by judicial action been set aside. This rule of exemption is founded in public policy, a,nd is applicable alike to civil and criminal remedies and proceedings, that parties may be induced freely to resort to the courts and judicial officers for the enforcement of their rights and the remedy of their grievances without the risk of undue punishment for their own ignorance of the law or for the errors of courts and judicial officers. The remedy of the party un j ustly arrested or imprisoned is by the recovery of costs which may be awarded to him, or the redress which some statute may give him, or by an action for malicious prosecution, in case the prosecution against him has been from unworthymotives and without probable cause.

Even malicious motives and the absence of probable cause do not give a party arrested an action for false imprisonment. They may aggravate his damage, but have nothing whatever to do with the cause of action.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.Y. 590, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-townsend-ny-1885.