Nicholson v. Sternberg

61 A.D. 51, 70 N.Y.S. 212
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 61 A.D. 51 (Nicholson v. Sternberg) 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
Nicholson v. Sternberg, 61 A.D. 51, 70 N.Y.S. 212 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Williams, J.:

The judgment and order appealed from should he affirmed, with costs.

The action was brought to recover damages for alleged malicious prosecution. The appellant defendant instituted the prosecution of the plaintiff complained' of by making affidavit before the other defendant, Maine, a justice of the peace of the town of Manlius, Onondaga county, and procuring a warrant to be issued by such justice for the crime of obtaining food and other hotel accommodations at appellant’s hotel to the amount of fourteen dollars and thirty-one cents, and thereafter absconding and surreptitiously removing his baggage therefrom with intent to cheat and defraud appellant out of the price of said food and accommodations, contrary to section 382 of the Penal Code. The affidavit was made, and warrant was issued January 21,1898; the crime was charged to have been committed on or about December 13, 1897, and for several days thereafter in the town of Manlius. The plaintiff Was not arrested on the warrant until April, 1898, and was not tried until June 27,1898, when he was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment in the Onondaga County Penitentiary for sixty days or to pay a fine of ten dollars. A commitment was made out by the justice, and under such commitment plaintiff was taken to the penitentiary. He was treated as prisoners usually were who were committed to that institution, and then, after being imprisoned there for five or six hours of one day, he was released, on an appeal being taken from the judgment to the County Court, and bail given, as we assume, although it does not very clearly appear from the record. The judgment of conviction was reversed by the County Court and a judgment reversing the conviction and discharging the'plaintiff herein from custody was entered November 29, 1899. This action [53]*53was brought the 12th day of April, 1900. The commencement of the prosecution -and its termination favorably to the plaintiff were, therefore, unquestioned. Malice, so far as necessary to maintain the action, might be inferred from the want of probable cause, so that the only two issues submitted to the jury were want of probable cause and the amount of damages. The appellant claims that the judgment of conviction, even though reversed by the County Court on appeal, was conclusive evidence of probable cause, and, therefore, want of probable cause should not have been left to the jury as a question of fact, their finding of that issue favorably to the plaintiff cannot be supported, and the action cannot he maintained. For this proposition Palmer v. Avery (41 Barb. 290 ; affd., 41 N. Y. 619, without opinion) is cited. In that case Avery brought an action in Justice’s Court against Palmer, but allowed the action to go down by not appearing on the return day. A second action was commenced for the same cause, and was allowed to go down in the same manner; a third action was then commenced for the same cause, issue was joined, the action was tried, both parties swearing witnesses, and a judgment was recovered for plaintiff for $100; an appeal was taken and a new trial was had in County Court, where a judgment was recovered by the defendant. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court, and that appeal was pending and undetermined when the action for malicious prosecution was commenced, tried and determined on appeal. This action for malicious prosecution was commenced after the trial of the third action in Justice’s Court and before the trial of such action in County Court. The action for malicious prosecution was tried after the trial of the third action in County Court.

A motion for nonsuit was made at the close of the evidence on the grounds,

First. Because the defendant had shown probable cause of action against the plaintiff by showing a judgment in favor of defendant against the plaintiff in Justice’s Court.

Second. Because the litigation was not terminated in favor of the plaintiff when.this action was commenced.

The court nonsuited on the first ground without passing upon the second, holding the judgment of the justice grima facie evidence of probable cause, and refusing to submit the question of probable [54]*54cause to the jury on all the evidence as a question of fact. This result was affirmed at General Term held by Morgan, Bacon and. Foster, JJ., but they did not agree upon the ground of affirmance. Morgan and Foster, JJ., agreed that there was no question for the jury as to the want of probable cause, because the judgment rendered by the justice was conclusive upon that question in the ¡absence of any proof of fraud, conspiracy or subornation in procuring the judgment, while Bacon, J., was of the opinion that the judgment of the justice was prima facie evidence merely of probable cause and should have been submitted to the jury with all the-other evidence in the case, and the jury allowed to pass upon the question of probable cause as one of fact. Bacon and Foster, JJ., agreed that there was no termination of the prosecution complained -of, favorably to the.plaintiff, proven, while Morgan, J., refused to consider or pass upon that question. The opinions of the judges upon "that appeal reviewed most of the cases now cited by counsel here. In view of the fact that no reason was assigned by the Court of Appeals for its affirmance in the case, we are left in doubt as to whether they agreed with the one or the other opinion as to the proof of probable cause. They must have been satisfied that there was no proof of the termination of the prosecution favorably to the plaintiff.

In Burt v. Place (4 Wend. 593) it was held that a judgment in Justice’s Court in favor of the defendant waspri/ma fctcie evidence, merely, of probable cause, not conclusive evidence, and was subject to be overcome by other evidence in the cáse, including the judgment of the Common Pleas reversing the judgment of the justice. This case was a well-considered case aúd the opinion of the court reviewed many of the cases considered in Palmer v. Avery (supra). It was followed by Bacon, J., in the latter, case, but not .by Morgan, J.

We are not aware that this question has ever arisen or been passed upon by the courts of this State since the Palmer v. Avery .case, which was decided in 1864, nearly forty years ago.. It seems strange that such should be the case, when these actions for malicious prosecution are so frequently before the courts. It will hardly be useful to enter into a discussion of the question anew. It seems to us that the rule making the justice’s judgment conclusive evidence of [55]*55probable cause and throwing upon the plaintiff the burden of proving fraud, conspiracy or subornation in procuring the judgment is too severe a one, and that every right of the defendant is preserved by holding the judgment of the justice merely prima facie evidence of probable cause, and liable to be overcome by the reversal of the judgment by the appellate court, and any other evidence that may be given bearing upon the subject, and' making the question of probable cause a question of fact for the jury upon all the evidence in the case. Justices are not ordinarily men of great ability or extraordinary good judgment or common sense. The complainant in a criminal prosecution goes to a justice ex parte, tells him about the case, elicits his attention and creates an interest in the matter against the accused person.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.D. 51, 70 N.Y.S. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-sternberg-nyappdiv-1901.