Mulligan v. New York & Rockaway Beach Railway Co.

29 N.E. 952, 129 N.Y. 506, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 84 Sickels 506, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 899
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 952 (Mulligan v. New York & Rockaway Beach Railway Co.) 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
Mulligan v. New York & Rockaway Beach Railway Co., 29 N.E. 952, 129 N.Y. 506, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 84 Sickels 506, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 899 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinions

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff recovered damages in this case mpon an allegation that he was unlawfully arrested and imprisoned by the defendant. The legal question involved relates to the responsibility of the defendant for the conduct -of a ticket agent under the following circumstances: On the 10th of July, 1888, the plaintiff and a companion went to the' ■defendant’s station at the corner of Atlantic avenue and Testa •street, Brooklyn, and procured from the ticket agent there two ■excursion tickets to Bockaway Beach. The plaintiff handed to the agent a new five dollar bill in payment for the tickets .and received from him the tickets and the change. A very .short time before the plaintiff and his friend appeared at the ■station and purchased the ticket a ■ detective connected with the Brooklyn police force came to the station and left with the agent the following paper:

“ Look out for three men passing $5 counterfeit bills, Car-' field picture. One 35 years, blue coat, black slouch hat, small *509 dark mustache. One 40 years, dark alapaca coat, black pants, slouch hat; the other 35 years, blue suit, black slouch hat, full red whiskers, looks like Italian.” When the plaintiff and his companion came to the station the ticket agent supposed they were two of the parties described in the notice left with him by the detective. The agent’s statement as to what took place between himself and the detective before the plaintiff appeared at the station and his action in consequence down to the time of the arrest is not contradicted The agent was told by the detective that if any of these men referred to in the paper put in an appearance to have the officers arrest them. He says that the two men walked up to the window of the-ticket office and the plaintiff took a brand new five dollar bill from his pocket and asked for two tickets for Rockaway Beach and return. What the agent then did is perhaps ‘best expressed in his own language.

He says: KI took the money from him and gave him the two tickets; didn’t let on anything at the time; took the bill and left it one side, because it looked queer.’ After the two went outside a messenger boy came in; I took the bill up before the messenger came; took a pin and pulled to find the two parallel silk threads that run through .the bill, it appears, in all these kind of bills that are made with the distributor fibre through, it is like a pencil mark, red and blue, and when I picked at it I could not see anything in it, and as I have no instructions to arrest anybody, I took the bill and when the messenger boy came in I told him to take the bill, go up to the Howard House and see if he could find Detective McHeany. If he did, to give him the bill and tell him that the men who had the bill were here at the station. I told him that if he didn’t find him to give it to the ticket agent at the Howard House, the detective said something about giving him the bill and to ask him if that was the bill. I sent the bill away by this boy, the same bill that I received. Afterwards Officer Kenney and the messenger boy came in. The bill was not returned to me. I never had the bill after I gave it to the messenger boy.”

*510 It seems that in consequence of the action of the agent that the police arrived in a short time after the ticket had been purchased and while the plaintiff and his companion were sitting on a bench outside and as the plaintiff claims the agent pointed him out to the police and directed them to arrest him.

He was arrested and brought to the police court, when it appearing that the bill was good he was discharged. The transaction immediately preceding the arrest is thus described by the plaintiff:

I went in and handed him in a five dollar bill to the ticket agent, asked him for two return tickets for Rockaway; he took the bill and looked at me; I thought that it was some young man that might have known me, he was going so slow, going to make the change and give me the tickets ; and walked back in the rear of the office, there was an operator, a lady sitting there; he had some conversation with her and in another corner ivas a boy, in another corner of the room; he came back to me and looked at me again, I says, you ought to be in a little more hurry than that, he didn’t say a word but handed me out the change and my return tickets — the change of the five dollar bill, which I think was four thirty, or whatever it was. Then we walked out on the platform, down on the Atlantic Avenue side and sat on the bench of the station platform for ten or fifteen minutes, waiting for the train to come up. It is a regular platform, I think there is a porch over it. I did not have to pass through a gate to go to it.”

After the plaintiff was pointed out to the police by the agent, he was brought into the ticket office, and the agent then charged him with having passed to him a five dollar counterfeit bill, which the plaintiff denied, but gave to the agent another bill in its place. The agent denied that he gave any direction to the police to make the arrest, and there was some question on the trial as to whether the bill that was actually passed by the plaintiff was the bill produced before the police magistrate, and found by him to be good, but these questions must be regarded as settled in the plaintiff’s favor by the verdict of the jury.

*511 Assuming, as we must, that the agent directed the arrest, and that the plaintiff had committed no offense that justified it, the question still remains whether the agent was acting in the line of his duty, so as to make the defendant responsible for his acts. It is quite clear from the evidence that the agent was first put upon his guard and in fact set in motion, not by any direction from the defendant, but by the police. When he took the bill he knew, or at least believed it to be a counterfeit, but notwithstanding this, he gave the plaintiff defendant’s property for it, whereas it was his duty, considering him merely as the agent of the defendant, to refuse it. He did not take the bill in the course of his business as agent, but for the purpose of entrapping persons that he believed to be engaged in the commission of crime. This may have been laudable enough on his part as a citizen, or as a person aiding the police, but he was not acting in the line of his duty as defendant’s agent. If he had been cheated or imposed upon by the plaintiff, or if he honestly believed he had been, and then attempted to recover what he had, or supposed he had, lost by the arrest of the plaintiff, it might then be said that he was engaged in the protection of the property and interest of the defendant, and, therefore, acting within the line of his duty. But here a ticket agent of a railroad deliberately takes from a person, applying to purchase a ticket, what he believes to be a counterfeit five dollar bill, not, of course, in good faith, or in the regular and ordinary course of his business, but for the purpose of aiding the police in the detection of criminals, and then immediately directs the arrest of the person from whom he took the bill, such an act on his part is not binding on his principal. If he was in fact acting within the scope, and in the line, of his duty, he would have refused to receive what he believed to be counterfeit money for the property of his principal, and would have refused to part with such property, except upon receipt of what, at least, he believed to be good money.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 952, 129 N.Y. 506, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 84 Sickels 506, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulligan-v-new-york-rockaway-beach-railway-co-ny-1892.