47 N.Y.S. 454 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The plaintiff charges that the defendant became liable to him for the voluntary escape of one Charles O’Donnell, who was arrested upon an execution against his person, issued on a judgment recovered against him by the plaintiff. It appears that O’Donnell was arrested by the defendant upon such execution on or about December. 13,1895, and that afterwards, on or about the twentieth of that month, upon the delivery of the requisite-undertaking, he was admitted to the liberties. of the jail of Richmond county, which liberties were co-extensive with the county. He was on the Staten Island ferryboat which left New York for that island at twelve-twenty o’clock, on Sunday morning, March 15, 1896. When .the boat landed on the island he became unconscious, was carried from the boat, and died soon after in Richmond county. It does not appear when, he left there and went to New York. This action was commenced in April, 1896.' The absence of O’Donnell from the. liberties of the jail at any time, without the assent of the plaintiff, was an escape. (Code Civ. Proc. § 155.) And if the escape was voluntary, that is, with the assent of the defendant, the latter was not relieved from liability by the return of the prisoner. Otherwise, his return to the liberties of the jail, where he died before the suit was commenced, constituted a defense. (Id. § 171.) The escape of a prisoner in custody on a body execution is either voluntary or negligent. In the former case the escape is not' purged by his return. It is otherwise in case of a negligent escape if he returns before, suit is instituted against the sheriff. (Littlefield v. Brown, 1 Wend. 398; Lansing v. Fleet, 2 Johns. Cas. 3.) That was matter of defense for the defendant,
The most that can well be claimed on the part of the plaintiff is
The failure (urged upon our attention) of the sheriff to deliver the undertaking to the plaintiff, as provided by the statute (Code Civ. Proc. § 150), was a mere omission of the defendant to do his duty in that respect, and can have no essential bearing upon the question of the alleged escape. It is not seen that the disposition made of the questions of fact by the verdict of the jury was against the weight of the evidence in the view they were permitted to take of it.
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.