Onderdonk v. State

170 Misc. 2d 155, 648 N.Y.S.2d 214, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 346
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJune 30, 1996
DocketClaim No. 80829
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 Misc. 2d 155 (Onderdonk v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Onderdonk v. State, 170 Misc. 2d 155, 648 N.Y.S.2d 214, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 346 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Donald J. Corbett, Jr., J.

[157]*157On June 17, 1988, at about 9:15 p.m., officers of the New York State Police entered claimant’s home for the purpose of executing a search warrant. Claimant alleges that she has been injured as the result of malicious prosecution, abuse of process, trespass and negligence, all of which caused monetary damages for humiliation, mental suffering, loss of income, personal and real property damage, damage to reputation and a decrease in the value of the real property which was the subject of the search.

During the late spring of 1988, New York State Trooper Moesch, who was assigned to the road patrol, was approached by one Curtis Wilson, a resident of the Trooper’s home town of Plattsburg, New York, on some three to four occasions over a three-week period. Wilson claimed that he knew the location of real property where drugs were being used and sold. Wilson further told the Trooper that he had been present at the house; that he had seen a large quantity of marihuana, some cocaine and LSD; that he had personally used drugs at the house and identified the dealer as one "Tom,” who also allegedly possessed numerous weapons, including an Uzi, on the premises. He identified the subject location as a log cabin in Naples, New York, and gave the Trooper the address of 7407 Reservoir Road.

After the second meeting with Wilson, Trooper Moesch contacted the narcotics branch of the New York State Police, and Investigator Fuller was assigned to commence an investigation. After further interrogation, Curtis Wilson was brought before Ontario County Court Judge George A. Reed. Wilson was sworn, questioned as a confidential informant on the record under oath, and proceeded to describe the log cabin on Reservoir Road and the surrounding features of the real property. In great detail, he described the log cabin, its living room, three types of illegal drugs, telephone calls, money, etc. He answered all of Judge Reed’s questions, and a review of his testimony in exhibit A is most persuasive. As a result thereof, a search warrant for the home on Reservoir Road was granted on June 17, 1988, by Judge Reed.

With additional support from other members of the New York State Police, the search warrant was executed. None of the contraband set forth in the search warrant was found, except for two grams of marihuana, for which claimant was charged with a violation. The Troopers determined that Wilson, the confidential informant, had lied to them and to the court. The very next day Trooper Moesch saw Wilson and arrested [158]*158him for perjury. He was subsequently tried and convicted of perjury and sentenced to State prison.1

The owner of the real property, the claimant herein, had lived on Reservoir Road, an isolated rural location, for 10 years prior to the execution of the search warrant. At the time, she was employed as a groom at the Finger Lakes Race Track in Canandaigua, New York, where her earnings amounted to $225 a week. Some eight days before the execution of this warrant, claimant had listed her home for sale, with an asking price of $68,000.

On the 17th day of June 1988, claimant went to bed as usual at 8:30 p.m. At 9:15 p.m. the barking of her dog woke her up. She looked out her kitchen window, saw many cars randomly parked in her yard and driveway, and saw men dressed as police officers carrying guns. She returned to her bedroom to put on a bathrobe and then proceeded to the living room. As she entered the living room, she heard the words "State Police.” As soon as she started to open the lock on her front door, it burst open and the State Police entered. The search commenced, but all that was found was a small amount of marihuana, which claimant alleged belonged to an old boyfriend. Neither the large quantity of marijhuana and cocaine, nor any guns were located. Indeed, they were never there and for some still unknown reason, the confidential informant Wilson had fabricated the entire story.

In the execution of the search warrant, claimant’s front door handle was pulled off; the back storm door window was broken with a pointed shovel; and both the front and rear doors were damaged and unable to be used. The doors were damaged to such an extent that after the doors had been temporarily secured, the claimant had to enter and exit her home by a window. She contends that her lawn was torn up, an interior closet door was damaged, and that she suffered mental distress and humiliation.

State Police Investigator Wentworth testified that during the execution of a search warrant it is necessary, from time to time, to forcibly enter a structure and that damage may be done to the premises. In addition, claimant allegedly was told that the property damage would be "paid for and fixed in a timely manor [sic]”. (Exhibit E.)

[159]*159Thereafter, claimant told her employer at Finger Lakes Race Track what had happened, and two weeks later she was terminated without any reason being given.2 She remained unemployed for three weeks. She paid a handyman $308.84 to repair the damage to the doors and window, which repairs were completed by the end of August 1988, some six weeks later. I find claimant wholly credible concerning the property damage item. There was no offer after the execution of the search warrant by any member of the New York State Police, nor by any other State or public official, to assist the claimant in obtaining compensation for this damage.

Claimant alleges that, as a result of this damage done to her property by the State Police, acting under the color of a search warrant, she was unable to continue to list her house for sale, and was thus forced to wait until March of the next calendar year to put it on the market again. She did so, and the house sold one year later, in May 1989, for $60,000. She alleges direct damages in the amount of $8,000 for the loss in the value of the property due to the delay, additional expenses for insurance, heat and electric until the time of the sale, and mental distress.

There is no question that the claimant was the innocent party involved in this proceeding, and it is without dispute that the members of the New York State Police were totally misled by the confidential informant. It is also without dispute that claimant sustained monetary damages as a result of this entire episode, at the very least, in costs to repair the home, as well as damage to the lawn.

Nonetheless, I cannot and do not credit the testimony concerning the loss in the value of the real property in the amount of $8,000, purportedly due to the inability to continue to list the property for sale during the remainder of 1988. Real estate market conditions change, and claimant was certainly able to continue the property listing as of September 1, 1988, and some $300 in damage to the doors was not a sufficient reason to wait until the following year to list the property. Such a claim for diminution of the value of the real property is vague and speculative. The losses claimed for the carrying charges for heat, electric and insurance are similarly not compensable.

As noted above, claimant originally predicated liability upon causes of action sounding in malicious prosecution, abuse of [160]*160process, trespass and negligence. I will address each putative cause of action seriatim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 Misc. 2d 155, 648 N.Y.S.2d 214, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onderdonk-v-state-nyclaimsct-1996.