Voltz v. . Blackmar

64 N.Y. 440, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 88
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 64 N.Y. 440 (Voltz v. . Blackmar) 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
Voltz v. . Blackmar, 64 N.Y. 440, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 88 (N.Y. 1876).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The plaintiff was arrested and imprisoned without warrant issued, and the jury have found that the arrest was instigated and directed by the defendant. The evidence on this point was conflicting, but this court is concluded by the finding of the jury upon the question. The jury have also found that no felony was committed by the plaintiff in appropriating his principal’s money, or in taking *444 from the safe the warehouse receipts, although there is no room for question that these acts were without justification, and constituted a flagrant violation of the defendant’s rights, and of the duty the plaintiff owed to his employer. But as the plaintiff’s arrest and imprisonment, upon the facts found, was not justified, he was entitled to recover the damages sustained thereby.

The judge instructed the jury that they were not confined, in awarding damages, to giving compensation merely for the injury sustained by the plaintiff, but that beyond this they might award damages to any extent by way of punishment to the defendant, and as a warning to others against committing like offences. In vindictive actions, as they are sometimes termed, such as libel, assault and battery and false imprisonment, the conduct and motive of the defendant is open to inquiry, with a view to the assessment of damages; and if the defendant, in committing the wrong complained of, acted recklessly or willfully and maliciously, with a design to oppress and injure the plaintiff, the jury, in fixing the damages, may disregard the rule of compensation, and beyond that may, as a punishment to the defendant, and as a protection to society against a violation of personal rights and social order, award such additional damages as in their discretion they may deem proper. The same rule has been held to apply in the ease of a willful injury to property, and in actions of tort founded upon negligence, amounting to misconduct and recklessness. (Tillotson v. Cheetham, 3 J. R., 56; King v. Root, 4 Wend., 113, Tifft v. Culver, 3 Hill, 180; Cook v. Ellis, 6 id., 466; Burr v. Burr, 7 id., 207; Taylor v. Church, 8 N. Y., 460; Hunt v. Bennett, 19 id., 174; Millard v. Brown, 35 id., 297.)

In actions for assault or for false imprisonment, the damages are, from the nature of the injury claimed, incapable of exact ascertainment. If the cause of action is made out, the plaintiff is entitled to compensation, to be ascertained by the jury, whatever may have been the motive which actuated the defendant. But it is the constant practice *445 in actions for assault and battery to allow the defendant, in mitigation of damages, to show that the plaintiff provoked the assault by which he was injured, and the jury are allowed to consider the provocation, if immediate, in awarding damages and in determining how much of the injury is justly attributable to the defendant. Where exemplary or punitive damages are claimed, all the circumstances immediately connected with the transaction, tending to exhibit or explain the motive of the defendant, are admissible in evidence. The plaintiff on his part may show that there was express malice, and, on the other hand, the defendant is entitled to the benefit of any circumstances tending to show that he acted under an honest belief that he was justified in doing the act complained of, or under immediate provocation, or the impulse of sudden passion or alarm, excited by the conduct of the plaintiff. The law takes notice of the frailties of human nature, and even where human life is taken by a criminal act, it distinguishes between a deliberate killing and a killing in the heat of passion, and graduates the degree of the crime and the punishment, in view of this circumstance. The facts which led to the arrest and imprisonment of the defendant, although not upon the finding of the jury justifying it, might, if the jury had been allowed to give them their full weight, have mitigated the damages awarded. The plaintiff was the confidential clerk and agent of the defendant, who resided at Buffalo, and was conducting his business of the sale of malt in the city of Hew York. He had been employed by the year at a fixed salary, and his employment terminated under his contract on the 1st of September, 1873. He had charge of the defendant’s office in Hew York, and held a power of attorney to sign and indorse checks, notes, drafts and bills of exchange, and to accept drafts and bills for his principal. The defendant kept a bank account at the Fourth Hational Bank of Hew York, upon which the plaintiff drew checks in the name of his principal in the course of the business. The defendant, by letter dated the twenty-ninth of August, written at Buffalo, in response to a letter *446 from the plaintiff, informed him in substance that his services would not be required for another year, but expressed the desire that he would remain in New York until the fifteenth of September, and if he did not wish to remain, that he would so inform him, and he would go to New York and take charge of the office. The plaintiff remained in charge of the office until the sixth of September. On the fifth of September, without the defendant’s knowledge or authority, he drew from the bank $4,000 on a check signed by him in the defendant’s name, and deposited it to his own credit in the same bank, taking therefor a certificate of deposit payable to his own order. The check was drawn against funds of the defendant, and after payment of this check there remained in the bank about $1,000 to the defendant’s credit. The plaintiff on the same .day advised the defendant at Buffalo by telegraph, that he had drawn "the check for $4,000 — “my account ” —which was the first knowledge which the defendant had of the transaction. The defendant at the time was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of about $3,800, of which $3,000, or thereabouts, was for money loaned by the plaintiff to him, and the balance for arrears of salary.

The plaintiff alleges that he drew the check to pay the sum owing him by the defendant,. including in the amount, salary for the whole .month of September. He at this time held a demand note of the defendant for $3,000, given for part of this indebtedness. It is not open to question that this transaction was unauthorized, and without justification. The power of attorney which the plaintiff held, gave him no authority to adjust by his sole act the account between himself and the defendant, orto draw from the bank the defendant’s money to pay a debt to himself.

It is a rule which stands upon the solid basis of reason and common sense, than an agent in matters touching the agency, cannot act so as to bind his principal when he has an adverse interest in himself. The law will not permit a conflict in this way between his interest and his duty, and removes the temptation to wrong, by absolutely disabling him in such a *447 • ease from acting for himself, and at the same time for his principal.

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Bluebook (online)
64 N.Y. 440, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voltz-v-blackmar-ny-1876.