Rockwell v. Brown

1 Trans. App. 278
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Trans. App. 278 (Rockwell v. Brown) 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
Rockwell v. Brown, 1 Trans. App. 278 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

Davies, Ch.J.

This action was commenced in January, 1861, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by Plaintiff, by reason of slanderous words spoken by the Defendant.

The complaint alleges that on the 19th of January, 1860, the Defendant, in the presence of divers good citizens, &c., stated that the Plaintiff stole his cow. , The Defendant denied the complaint, and set up other defences.in his answer, some in bar and others in mitigation of damages.

The cause was referred by consent of parties, and tried before the referee in October, 1861, who made his report in favor of the Plaintiff for fifty dollars damages, and judgment thereon was perfected for the Plaintiff, and the same was affirmed at the General Term. The Defendant now appeals to this Court.

The following are the facts found by the referee :

1. That the Defendant spoke the words mentioned in the complaint at the time therein alleged.

2. That the words so spoken by the Defendant were untrue.

3. That the words so spoken were wilfully and maliciously spoken by the Defendant.

4. That on the 9th day of April, 1860, Plaintiff commenced an action against the Defendant in the Supreme Court, for a malicious prosecution of said Plaintiff by said Defendant, in causing said Plaintiff, to be arrested upon a warrant issued against him by James Comstock, Esq., a justice of the peace of [279]*279Marathon, in the county of Cortland, upon the charge and accusation of having stolen a cow from the Defendant.

That the charge and accusation of stealing, upon which said warrant was issued against the Plaintiff, was a similar charge and accusation of having committed the same offence which was made by the Defendant in speaking the said words mentioned in the complaint.

That the charge and accusation upon which said warrant was issued, although relating to the same transaction referred to by the Defendant, in speaking said words, was made previous to the speaking of said words by him.

That the Plaintiff prosecuted said action for malicious prosecution to trial and judgment, and upon the trial thereof, which took place at the Broome county circuit, in September, 1860, he had a verdict in his favor for sixty dollars, upon which judgment was duly entered on the 3d day of June, 1861.

And the referee found as conclusions of law:

1. That said action for malicious prosecution, and the verdict and judgment therein, were no defence to this action, cither in bar or mitigation of damages.

2. That the Plaintiff had sustained damages in this action to the amount of fifty dollars, and that he was entitled to judgment therefor.

It is now contended, on the part of the Appellant, that the recovery by this Plaintiff, in the action for a malicious prosecution by this Defendant, is a bar to a recovery for damages for the words spoken, and the ease of Sheldon v. Carpenter (4 Coins. 579) is relied on. But an examination of the facts of that case, upon which it was decided, will show that they are unlike those presented in the case at bar. Then the slanderous words were spoken with a view and for the purpose of causing the arrest of the Plaintiff in Rockland county, and having him conveyed to the city of Hew York, where the Defendant professed to be able to make good the charge. The Plaintiff was accordingly arrested, brought to the city of New York, lodged in jail, and the next day the charge was abandoned, and the Plaintiff was [280]*280accused of a different offence, but was discharged from custody. The Plaintiff brought an action of slander for the words spoken, and on the trial the Defendant offered to prove that the Plaintiff had therefore prosecuted a suit against the Defendant and others for a malicious prosecution, in causing him to be arrested and taken to New York on the same change for which the present action of slander was brought, and that the Plaintiff had in that suit recovered a verdict of $5,000.

The evidence was objected to and excluded, and this Court held that such exclusion was improper. Judge Buggies, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said : In an action for malicious prosecution, the Plaintiff is entitled to recover damages, not only for his unlawful arrest and imprisonment, and for the expenses of his defence, but for the injury to his fame and character by reason of the false accusation. The latter indeed is, in many cases, the gravamen of the action. An accusation of crime, made under the form of law, or on the pretence of bringing a guilty man to justice, is made in the most imposing and impressive manner, and may inflict a deeper injury upon the reputation of the party accused, than the same words uttered under any other circumstances. The most appropriate remedy for the calumny in such cases is by the action for malicious prosecution. The injured party cannot be entitled to two recoveries for the same cause, and a recovery in that form must, therefore, be a bar to a subsequent action of slander, for the same identical accusation.”

The arrest of this Plaintiff, for which, on the 9th of April, 1860, he brought his action for malicious prosecution, was made on the 7th day of October, 1859., and he was discharged on the 9th day of October, in that year.

The slanderous words for which this action is brought were uttered on the 19th of June, 1860.

The recovery, therefore, in the suit for malicious prosecution, could not have been, and was not, for the same identical accusation. The Plaintiff recovered in that suit not only for his unlawful arrest and imprisonment, but for the injury to his fame and character, by reason of the making of that false accusation. lie [281]*281received nothing for the utterance of the slanderous words after that prosecution had terminated. That prescribed an independent cause of action, and the referee properly held that the recovery of damages in the action for the malicious prosecution furnished no bar to a recovery in this action.

It is insisted that the referee erred in excluding the offer of the Defendant to show that when the Plaintiff was arrested upon the charge of stealing the cow, and brought before the magistrate, he settled with the Defendant for taking the cow, and was discharged without an examination.

I am unable to see how this evidence would have benefited the Defendant, if it had been admitted. It certainly did not tend in any degree to show that the Plaintiff had stolen the cow. On the contrary, the inference would be from the offer, that the taking W'as to the extent of a trespass, for which the parties settled. We cannot assume that the Defendant offered to show that he compromised a. felony, or that we could infer from the offer that the Plaintiff admitted that he had committed one.

But a conclusive reason for rejecting it is found in the fact that it related to a transaction which occurred several months prior to the speaking of the slanderous words, and the fact offered no justification for charging the Plaintiff with theft. The offer would have been appropriate in the action for the malicious prosecution, but was properly excluded on this trial.

Josiah Hopkins, a witness for the Defendant, in his cross-examination, was asked, “Did you tell him (Plaintiff’s father, Peter Rockwell), at his house, last July, that Brown told you that Plaintiff stole his cow ? ” The witness answered, “ I did not tell him so.

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Related

Pendleton v. . Empire Stone Dressing Company
19 N.Y. 13 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
Sheldon v. Carpenter
4 N.Y. 578 (New York Court of Appeals, 1851)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Trans. App. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockwell-v-brown-ny-1867.