Rawson v. Francis H. Leggett

77 N.E. 682, 184 N.Y. 504, 22 Bedell 504, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1389
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 682 (Rawson v. Francis H. Leggett) 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
Rawson v. Francis H. Leggett, 77 N.E. 682, 184 N.Y. 504, 22 Bedell 504, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1389 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinions

*506 Per Curiam.

This action was brought for malicious prosecution. At the instigation of the defendants, as we shall assume upon this appeal, several indictments for grand larceny were found against the plaintiff in the county of New York, which were thereafter dismissed. Thereupon he brought this action and obtained a verdict for $25,000. It is insisted by the appellants that this result was erroneous and that plaintiff as matter of law failed to establish want of probable cause. A majority of the court concur in this view and think that the judgment should be reversed.

Appellants are and were wholesale grocers in the city of New York, having and carrying upon their books the accounts of many thousand customers. In 1901 and for some time prior thereto they had in their employ a salesman named Borchardt who made sales to and collections from a large number of customers. In November of said year it was discovered that during a period of about three years by manipulation of his customers’ accounts and misappropriation of moneys collected from them he had stolen from his employers about $24,000, and criminal proceedings were instituted against him. It was the intention and custom of defendants to guard against such peculations as this upon the part of salesmen'by sending every month to each of their customers a statement of account for comparison and verification, with the request to report any irregularities or discrepancies at the office, and not to the salesmen. In some manner these statements in the case of Borchardt’s customers were wholly or largely suppressed and not sent, and thus the prompt discovery of his crime prevented.

During the period above mentioned and for a long time prior thereto plaintiff was in the employ of defendants as their head credit man, receiving a salary of $4,500 a year, and amongst other duties charged with those of looking after the accounts with customers and salesmen dealing with the latter. He assumed supervision over Borchardt’s accounts and customers to the express exclusion of everybody except a member of the firm.

*507 There lias been no dispute in this litigation about the foregoing facts which, of course, were known to the defendants at the time they instituted the prosecution against plaintiff.

In addition, before instituting criminal proceedings, defendants knew, or personally or through their representatives were informed, of other real or alleged facts which, in connection with those already cited, are now claimed to have constituted a reliable and sufficient foundation for the assumption that plaintiff was guilty of the charges pressed against him. The existence of many of those facts and the correctness of the information relating thereto is not now challenged.

After his discovery and arrest, Borchardt made a confession both to Hr. Leggett and to others engaged in the investigation implicating plaintiff as a confederate in his crimes and as a partner to the extent of six or eight thousand dollars in the guilty proceeds thereof.

The monthly statements which should have been sent to Borchardt’s customers were delivered by the bookkeeper to plaintiff, by whom, after being checked, they should have been delivered to addressing and mailing clerks.

Plaintiff and Borchardt were upon terms of great intimacy, which appeared to increase- rather than decrease after the former concededly knew of the latter’s crimes, and while plaintiff was still in the employ of the defendants. During the few months before Borchardt’s apprehension, in the neighborhood of §1,600 were by him paid or passed to the credit of plaintiff.

In 1900 plaintiff consented that Borchardt should assume control of a certain account held by the defendants against one Yaeger, and although the moneys upon said account were collected by Borchardt in said year, no report or entry upon defendants’ books was made to disclose these facts, and this account, amounting to several hundred dollars, made up part of the embezzlement. Subsequently, in proceedings threatened against Borchardt for perjury in claiming that he was the owner of defendants’ account, plaintiff, when making an affidavit for his assistance, secured back from him or his attor *508 ney a slip of paper which he had written, indicating his willingness to hold .hack Borcliardt’s slips (made in the discharge of his duty as salesman relating to his accounts) for a short period, because of his lack of funds.

In the midst of the investigation of Borchardt’s crimes, plaintiff, without having, so far as appears, any other lucrative engagement, resigned his position and salary of $1,500 with defendants, and shortly thereafter left their employ.

The district attorney was made acquainted with the foregoing facts and information. Defendants occupied a consid-' erable length of time in investigating the subject, and with the exception of one set of facts hereafter specially to be referred to, as to which the parties are in conflict, we think fairly and fully placed before the district attorney the knowledge and information possessed or acquired by them. In addition, the latter official, through one of his assistants, caused an extended examination to be made of many of the people who had knowledge of the facts or had supplied the information, and after this had been done he ad vised, the submission of charges against Bawson to the grand jury with the resulting' indictments heretofore mentioned.

Defendants expressly deny any malice towards plaintiff and assert their reliance upon the advice of counsel and especially of the district attorney in instituting the criminal prosecution which they, undertook.

We think that upon all of the foregoing facts and others appearing in the record, to which we have not made specific reference, it must be held as a matter of law that defendants had probable cause to believe that Bawson was guilty of aiding Borchardt in the larcenies which were concededly committed, and were not guilty of any malicious prosecution.

Plaintiff especially challenges such conclusion and the propriety and legality .of defendants’ conduct in three respects, and insists that such case was made out for the consideration of the jury that, the judgment should stand.

In the first place he urges that it was a question of fact whether Borchardt ever made any confession implicating *509 him and that even if he did it was still for the jury to say whether such, confession was entitled to any credence as a basis for what was subsequently done. We cannot agree with this contention in either of its brandies. The proof that the confession was made does not rest upon the evidence alone of Mr. Leggett, but is sustained by other evidence so ample and trustworthy that the jury would have had no right to disregard it. So, too, while this confession might be the subject of suspicion as dictated by Borchardt’s personal interests, and would be insufficient of itself to furnish a basis for the prosecution of plaintiff, we think that it was so supported and corroborated by other facts appearing to exist at the time the indictments were found that defendants were entitled to rely n¡)on it as furnishing in part a probable cause for complaint. (Molloy v.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 682, 184 N.Y. 504, 22 Bedell 504, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawson-v-francis-h-leggett-ny-1906.