People v. Wickes

112 A.D. 39, 20 N.Y. Crim. 9, 98 N.Y.S. 163, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 596
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 112 A.D. 39 (People v. Wickes) 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
People v. Wickes, 112 A.D. 39, 20 N.Y. Crim. 9, 98 N.Y.S. 163, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 596 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Clarke, J.:

In March, 1901, Dr. As'hbel P. Grinnell.of Burlington, Yt., was arrested at the Grand Central Station in the city of Dew York, as, with his wife, he-.was about to take a train for- his home. The arrest was made because one-Edward Weston had identified Dr. Grinnell as one Ráymor, wlio-had theretofore obtained certain sums of money from Weston by false representations. Dr, Grinnell’s identity was soon established, and, after a short detention,' he was [41]*41released from custody. Thereafter Grinneli brought a civil action in the Supreme Court in the county of Hew York against Weston for $50,000 for damages for said arrest. In the verified answer interposed in said action Weston alleged : “ That on or about March 23d, 1901, at the Grand Central Station in Hew York City, the defendant, being misled and deceived by said great resemblance and similarity, acting in the honest though mistaken belief that the plaintiff was the person who had committed the felony hereinbefore described, and without any malice whatsoever, caused thea/rrest of the plaintiff in order that said plaintiff might be carried and conveyed before the proper magistrate, to be there dealt with according to law.” The said action came on for trial and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $12,500. The defendant in the case at bar, an attorney at law, represented the plaintiff, Grinneli, in said action as counsel and actually conducted the trial. He was to receive for his services as counsel twenty-five per cent of the verdict and one-half of the costs and allowances.' On appeal this court reversed the judgment entered on said verdict and ordered a new trial. (Grinnell v. Weston, 95 App. Div. 454.) The second trial was had in February, 1905, and a verdict for $10,000 was rendered for the plaintiff. The court reduced the amount to $5,000, and, tile plaintiff not consenting thereto, the verdict was set aside and a new trial ordered. Weston at that time was in Florida. The defendant at bar had theretofore procured a lock box in the Hew York post office and had caused stationery to be engraved with the heading Lewis Jarvis, Lock Box 1604, Hew York,” and on said letter paper and over the signature, written by himself, of “ Lewis Jarvis,” he sent to Weston in Florida a letter, dated February 18, 1905. That letter stated, inter alia: “ My dear Commodore, Please pardon me for intruding upon your holiday. You have entertained me very handsomely in the past; and I would be glad to do you some service. May I write that many of your friends think you have pursued this lawsuit with Dr. Grinneli long enough3 You must know you can never win the case. You admit that you caused the arrest (at least that is the statement, made in the answer, sworn to by you, which Mr. Mitchell prepared for you) ; * * *. The other jury gave $12,500. This jury gives $10,000. Would it do any good to appeal ? Suppose you should succeed in setting this verdict aside [42]*42also,, would Dr. Grrinne‘11 be thereby prevented from getting another verdict ? Commodore, as long as your answer remains what it is, the pase cannot be changed; and yon could not alter your answer, so' as to make it .really different, effectively and legally different without running the risk of a prosecution for perjury. Then' why not make an end of the case, Commodore? You have put up a splendid fight. FFo one could have done better for you than Mr, Osborne. 1 heard nine-tenths of this-last trial, and Could not but admire his wonderful management of the defense, in spite of your absence. You were favored by good fortune too.' Dr. Orintiell was very kind and generous toward you in his testimony, and "then Senator O’Sullivan summed the case- up on the plaintiff’s side; if-Mr. Wickes had madé the final address to the jury I believe that the' verdict would have been at least $20,000 against yo.u. But the publicity given to the matter ■ hurts your good name;, all your friends here are saving so. The newspapers were full of it. • * *. ^ Pray think of these suggestions,, my dear Commodore,. for your own sake,,and consider them. Talk them over with your good wife, or any. other disinterested friend. * • * * Biit I rather imagine that I need only to give you the hint; your own good sound- sense and excellent judgment will do the rest.” Weston did not reply to this letter. On February 21, 1905, the defendant,. Upon paper with the same engraved heading and over the same name of Lewis Jarvis, wrote again to Weston. Llaving first stated the motions which had been made, the letter proceeds: “Do you-want a. new trial ? Do you want, to have all this dragged out again in March, Believe me, Commodore,, it would be very bad for you. The only way you could avoid it would be .to wire Osborne to withdraw his motion. Then, if the Judge should deny Wickes’ motion (and, between you and me, the Judge will; for he told me that lie would), the case could go up on. appeal .on a simple appeal from the judgment: . But do you want to appeal again? The result, -the final result, would be against you; it, is bound to- be while, that-awful answer, which Mr. Mitchell allowed'you to swear tó, remains in the- case ;, and, ás I w'rote you before, you cannot now amend it; for any amendment, that is any amendment which would do you any good at all, as an answer, would really in the end, only involve you in more trouble, because you would have to swear to circum[43]*43stances so diametrically opposite to what you have already sworn to, that you would run the risk of a prosecution for perjury. * •* * Mow, Commodore, why don’t you settle the case? * * * Settle the case now, Commodore, for the sake of your own good name; you will never have a better opportunity than this.” This letter was not answered. On February 25, 1905, the defendant again wrote on the same paper and over the name of Lewis Jarvis : “ I was. in Court Friday morning; ” then followed an account of the court proceedings, and the letter continued: “ There, yo,u see Mr. Wickes gets the new trial he wanted. So, in March or April it will have to be gone into all over again, with a very good 'prospect of a verdict against you then of $20,000 or more. Commodore, your interests have not been looked after very well in this case, now have they ? * * * Really, Commodore, you ought to have settled the case long ago. It is not too late now, but .of coui-se you would, have to pay very much more now. Why don’t you send Mr. Dorrian, or some other man in whom you have confidence, to see Mr. Wickes, and try to come to terms with Dr. Grinnell at once, and then, when you come north, you can close the matter up for good and all.”

Prior to tlie third trial in May, 1905, Weston verified and had served an amended answer in the suit of Grinnell v. Weston. Paragraph 22 thereof was as follows: “ That on-or about the 22nd day of March, 1901, this defendant, acting in the honest, though mistaken belief that the plaintiff was the person who had-committed the.felony hereinbefore described in the State-of Mew York as aforesaid, and without any malice whatsoever, pursuant to the aforesaid instructions from the said Police Department of the City of Mew York, notified the said Police Department of the whereabouts of the said Rayrnor, as this defendant in good faith supposed and believed, and on or a.bout the 22nd day of .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 A.D. 39, 20 N.Y. Crim. 9, 98 N.Y.S. 163, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wickes-nyappdiv-1906.