Varda v. Lynch

203 A.D. 539, 196 N.Y.S. 641, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7241
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 24, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 203 A.D. 539 (Varda v. Lynch) 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
Varda v. Lynch, 203 A.D. 539, 196 N.Y.S. 641, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7241 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Hinman, J.:

It may well be that an assault was committed and that justice cries out for that which the law offers in retribution, but there is something more in the decision of this case than doing justice to the plaintiff.

The fair rights of the defendant Lynch are equally involved. If he was not guilty of this ill usage of the plaintiff which, if it occurred, was an ignominious and cowardly attack upon a helpless prisoner without reasonable or just excuse, it follows with obvious and equal force that the victim of this verdict has been unrighteously subjected to' that ignominy and unrighteously held up to the public scorn which should be felt toward one who would commit such an assault. The responsibility is ours to determine whether the record demonstrates the righteousness of this judgment against him. No feeling of sympathy for the plaintiff and no thought of the responsibility of the State Police as a whole, upon the theory that such an offense was committed by one of the members, should play any part in the determination whether this verdict is against the weight of the evidence.

There is no rule better settled in the law than that a plaintiff bringing a defendant into court upon a certain charge and swearing to the facts tending to substantiate that charge in an action at law shall be held responsible for his own theory and can command a recovery only upon that theory. This is very important in the determination of this case since the testimony of the plaintiff and of his witnesses demonstrates two entirely different assaults committed upon the plaintiff, one of which was testified to by the plaintiff and the other of which was testified to by his witnesses. If we are to consider the assault to which the plaintiff testifies, his testimony is discredited and impeached by his own witnesses. If we are to consider the assault , to which his witnesses testified, then the plaintiff cannot recover because it is contrary to the theory of his cause of action as pleaded and as proved by himself. I think this can be amply demonstrated by a review of the testimony.

The theory of the plaintiff’s complaint is that the defendant struck the plaintiff with a blackjack or butt of a heavy revolver or some other weapon, the exact nature of which is unknown to the [541]*541plaintiff, violently knocking plaintiff to the ground, ” and then kicked the plaintiff. Upon the witness stand the plaintiff explained the assault as follows: He opened the door and dragged us out of the car. We were handcuffed and he dragged us out of the car. The first thing he does he hits Jim Powers behind the ear with a blackjack. * * * He hit Jim Powers with a blackjack right here and Jim Powers goes into a faint. While he goes in a faint he pulls me down; and while I was leaning in this position they hit me with the butt of a gun * * *. Q. Who hit you? A. Sergeant Lynch * * *. Q. What did they do to you beside that, while you were outside of the car? A. The only thing they did they hit me. Q. I am speaking now about Lynch. A. The first thing he did he hit me right through here, on the head. The blow was so stunning that really I was in a daze and I didn’t know what was coming after; but I was kicked falling down and both of us falling down and they kicked us; and when we got up he punched us again in the face. Q. After you were in the car did he strike you in the car? A. No, sir, he did not.”

Not one of the witnesses sworn by the plaintiff in corroboration saw him hit outside the car. Boire swore: “ Then a couple of troopers came and I saw one of the troopers search the fellows, * * * outside the car. Q. How far from the car? A. Couple of feet. * * * Then they [Varda and Powers] got back in the car and I seen some fellow lean over in the car. * * * I saw a fellow in the car. I was outside the car and I saw Varda and Powers’ heads go down, one in each corner. Q. Who was in the car when Varda and Powers’ heads went down? A. Lynch.”

Wilmer Yell says that he walked around there and didn’t see anything until after I got back from my chores at the barn. * * * I see a State Trooper hitting them in the car as I was coming from the barn. * * * He was hitting him with his right fist. * * * I had just been to the barn while doing the chores.”

Dennis Yell testified: “ I see them take them out of the car and search them and they put them back in the car; and after a while they took them out again and brought them by the side of the house or shed. I could hear them making kind of a noise. I didn’t know whether they were choking them or not. * * * They put them back in the car and punched them and kicked them. * * * Q. And where was Mr. Varda when Mr. Lynch was pounding him? A. In the car. * * * Q. When you saw that Mr. Lynch was pounding Mr. Varda and Mr. Powers, what did you do? A. I went to the barn. Q. For what? A. I went to the barn to talk about it with my father. Q. And did your father go up to the automobile then? A. He came afterward. He fed his horse [542]*542and then he came up there. Q. Were you with him? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you hear the conversation between your father and Sergeant Lynch when your father got there? A. Yes. I heard my father tell him he didn’t want any more of that pounding done there.” In connection with this last testimony as to the conversation between the father and Lynch the father (Wilmer Yell) testified: “ Q. Did you see him [Lynch] hitting both of them? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you say anything to this trooper, Sergeant Lynch?. A. I didn’t say just to him. I come along behind the car and said I don’t want them to have that man abused in my yard,’ and nobody answered.”

Jessie Yell testified: I was in the other room and I come out in the kitchen and I just happened to look out doors and I see them. I saw a trooper hitting the two fellows in the car. * * * Q. How many troopers were there in the car when the pounding was going on? A. Only one.”

The above were all of the witnesses of the plaintiff who testified with reference to where the assault took place. All of them testified that it took place in the car, whereas the plaintiff testified that all of the assault took place outside of the car upon the ground in accordance with his complaint and that he was not assaulted afterward in the car. Boire saw them taken out and searched, put back in the car and then immediately assaulted. Wilmer Yell saw them assaulted in the car after he had come from the barn, whereupon he approached the defendant as he says and upbraided him for abusing the man in his yard. His son Dennis contradicts Boire in that there was a second removal from the car after they had been searched and returned to the car; that they were removed to the side of the house where he heard noises of choking and then put back' in the car where he saw them punched by Lynch. Thereupon Dennis went to the barn to tell his father about it and when it was all over, according to Dennis, his father came to the scene and he heard his father tell Lynch that he didn’t want any more pounding done there. Jessie Yell also swears that the assault took place in the car. Surely perjury is rampant in the camp of the plaintiff with suspicion pointing as readily at the plaintiff as at his witnesses for he is an interested party.

Let us scrutinize the testimony a little further. The plaintiff says a Ford commercial car with four or five State troopers came to the place and immediately two of them came over to the car, Lynch and another. Lynch cursed him and dragged them out of the car and immediately assaulted them.

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Bluebook (online)
203 A.D. 539, 196 N.Y.S. 641, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/varda-v-lynch-nyappdiv-1922.