177 A.D. 684 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment entered in Kings county June 26,1916, upon a verdict rendered at the Kings Trial Term against the defendant for $2,500 damages, and also from an order made at said term denying defendant’s motion upon the minutes for a new trial. The action was brought to recover damages for malicious prosecution, upon allegations that without probable cause and maliciously the defendant, on or about March 6, 1914, instituted a criminal prosecution against the plaintiff in the borough of Manhattan, charging
The evidence established the following principal facts: The defendant is and for many years has been (having been organized under an act passed April 4, 1806)
The plaintiff’s defense to such prosecution and charge was, in substancé, that he had not personally treated Darragh at all without a duly licensed physician, and that the institute and he, as its manager, never treated any one with the said Gatlin treatment or otherwise until a duly licensed physician employed by the institute had first seen the person and prescribed such treatment for him. Apparently the said Court of Special Sessions took the view that such defense was established and was sufficient. At the trial of this action the learned presiding justice apparently took the same view as to the law.
I think that the trial was conducted by the learned trial justice upon an entirely mistaken theory of the law; and that, upon the correct theory thereof, probable cause for the criminal prosecution was clearly established. I regard the case as one of very
I base my conclusions upon the following considerations:
First. The learned trial justice conducted the trial and submitted the case to the jury upon the theory of law that if the plaintiff herein, as manager of the corporation known as the “Gatlin Institute of Hew York, Inc.,” had it treat its patrons, although in its own name, by giving medicine only “ upon the advice and counsel, or prescription, in the particular case, of a duly licensed physician, it was not practicing medicine, and neither the corporation nor the plaintiff would be guilty of violating the law,” which prohibits such practice by any person other than a licensed physician. In his main charge he instructed the jury in the very words just quoted, and also to the same effect, in denying certain apt requests to the contrary made by the defendant, and the defendant duly excepted to such rulings.
The trial justice properly charged that the said corporation could not practice medicine — that is, that in that respect it stood the same as an individual. That was in strict accord with the decision of the Court of Appeals in People v. Woodbury Dermatological Inst. (192 N. Y. 454). He also properly charged the jury that if the plaintiff, as the manager of the corporation, aided and abetted it in so practicing medicine, he was equally guilty with the corporation itself, which, of course, is in strict accord with the provisions of section 2 of the Penal Law.
This doctrine that a business corporation may, in its own name, practice medicine, viz., administer medicine in treating disease or physical condition (See Public Health Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 45; Laws of 1909, chap. 49], § 160), provided only it does so upon the advice or prescription of a licensed physician in each individual case, appears to be in the very teeth of the unanimous decision of the Appellate Division in the First Department in People ex rel. Lederman v. Warden of City Prison (168 App. Div. 240). That court in that case affirmed an order made at Special Term dismissing a writ of habeas corpus obtained to
It will be noted that in that case the medical advice or prescription was always given by the licensed physician employed by the relator, who himself was umlicensed, and which physician was paid, not by the patient, but by the defendant. The decision in that case was expressly based, at least to some substantial extent, upon the opinion in the Woodbury Case (supra). The learned counsel for the respondent correctly states that the Court of Appeals in the latter case merely decided that a business corporation was a person within the meaning of the statute forbidding the practice of medicine by any person except a licensed physician, or the advertising of such practice. The learned Judge Willard Bartlett, who wrote for the court, went, in his opinion, much further. He contrasted the situation of such a business Corporation with that of a hospital organized under the Membership Corporations Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 43 [Laws of 1895, chap. 559], § 80, as amd. by Laws of 1900, chap. 404; now Consol. Laws, chap. 35 [Laws of 1909, chap. 40], § 130) with “the written approval of the State Board of Charities and a justice of the Supreme Court of the district” (p. 458).
In the later case of Matter of Co-operative Law Co. (198
The law of the case, as laid down here by the trial' justice, would give to a business corporation precisely the same power and right in that regard as that opinion declared, in effect, is possessed only by a corporation established under the Membership Corporations Law, viz., “a hospital, infirmary, dispensary, ” etc. Such a corporation as that, the opinion declared, was not subject to the operation of the said statutes prohibiting such practice. (192 N. Y. 458.)
The only distinction between the case here at bar and the Lederman Case (supra), which I can perceive, is that in that case the relator, an unlicensed physician, acted under a registered trade name, while in this case the plaintiff acted in the name of the business corporation as its manager. Each method was lawful, if the business was lawful, and the business was just as lawful for that relator as for this corporation. Indeed it is apparent that for all practicable purposes the plaintiff here was the corporation. Very likely the reason why he incorporated under the Business Corporations Law was that he might escape the need of obtaining the approval of the State Board of Charities and of a justice of this court (192 N. Y. 458), as one or both of such authorities might have insisted upon knowing the ingredients of the medicine to be administered in the “Gatlin Treatment,” which the plaintiff even at the trial hereof declared he did not know, and of which the . physician of the institute was also ignorant.
That the treatment amounted to the practice of medicine by some one cannot be doubted. Indeed, the trial justice in effect so charged. According to plaintiff’s own evidence, such treatment included the giving of pills, and also of some liquid
The plaintiff himself drew the advertisements. Those declared that the institute treated and cured and even guaranteed a cure for two years, viz.: “ Our guarantee covers a period of two years.” In the advertisements published by the plaintiff in the New York World there is not the slightest reference to any physician. No such reference appears until in the business card, by the words “ Dr. Wm. H. Upton, Medical Director.” In the sensational circular entitled “The Whirlpool of Drink, ” written by plaintiff, the institute is repeatedly spoken of as the treating party, viz.: “ The Gatlin Institute of New York accepts all patients under contract to cure * * * in three days.” It also states that the physician “ in all cases prescribes the Gatlin treatment;” that “ it is a secret remedy;” and even that the treatment may be given at one’s home, viz., “ will be sent by express to anyone who is unable to come to the New York Institute,” evidently meaning that the institute will thus treat a patient without having its physician even see him or any one else in its behalf.
The plaintiff admitted that he told defendant’s representative, when he went to see him before the institute opened for business, that the business of its doctor was “ to prescribe the Gatlin treatment.” In this connection it should be noted that according to plaintiff’s own testimony he was at that time advised, by the lawyer who incorporated the company for him, to go to the defendant and ascertain if the company’s proposed business would be lawful, and that he did so and was told by defendant’s representative, its chief counsel, in effect, that such business wquld be illegal, and that if he conducted it he would be arrested. It .is apparent, therefore, that the plaintiff was well warned before he attempted his course of business.
The physician of the institute, who in all cases prescribed the Gatlin treatment, was not paid by the patient at all, but by the corporation, and not even by it a fee for each case, but a
In short, it seems to me plain that the criminal case against the plaintiff was precisely like the Lederman Case (supra) in all essential particulars, and that he should have been convicted instead - of being acquitted by the Court of Special Sessions, and that probable cause for his prosecution by the defendant was established as matter of law. The defendant’s motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and contrary to the evidence was sufficient to raise and preserve that question for review here. Moreover the exceptions to the charge, as above noted, were also sufficient to that end.
Second. Assuming that the law of the case was correctly stated by the trial justice, namely, that the taking of advice or prescription from a licensed physician in each case was sufficient to save the corporation from violating the statute, still I think that probable cause was established as matter of law, certainly quite as much as it was in Rawson v. Leggett (184 N. Y. 504; and in this court, 97 App. Div. 416), in which case the plaintiff in a similar action to this, at the Westchester Trial Term, obtained a verdict for $25,000; and there was affirmance here; but the Court of Appeals, by a vote of four to three, reversed.
In the case here at bar the trial judge charged the jury, in effect, that if the affidavit of Darragh, upon which defend- • ant made its criminal complaint, were true, the plaintiff was in fact guilty of the crime charged. This was, I think, entirely correct. That affidavit stated that upon Darragh’s applying and presenting himself to plaintiff at the institute for treatment and making a bargain with him for treatment for the sum of $125, the plaintiff himself treated him for a time, one or two days, without any doctor at all appearing, and that in that interval plaintiff himself administered to him a hypodermic injection and gave to him certain pills and liquid medicine. It is of course manifest that if that were true Darragh "could not have been prescribed for by the physician of the institute before plaintiff administered such treat
I perceive in the record nothing which tends to indicate that defendant’s representative should not have believed Darragh and acted upon his statement and affidavit. The plaintiff and his doctor had Darragh under their personal observation and treatment for five days, yet neither in any manner testified that he was a “bum,” or to anything in his appearance or otherwise, to his discredit. As I read the record, no prescription by any physician in the Darragh case was produced, either at the trial of the criminal action or at that of this case, although called for upon the latter. It is notable that neither the plaintiff nor the doctor gave any testimony upon direct examination as to the Darragh incident, and the doctor did not testify about it at all. The defendant’s representative, the lawyer Mr. Dyer, testified that Darragh came to his office and made his complaint, and that thereupon he took his statement in writing and later in the form of the affidavit in evidence; that Darragh even stated then that he had brought a civil action in a municipal court to recover back the money he had paid the institute. The lawyer further testified that he followed the matter up by consulting with his chief, Mr. Vandiver, and that they directed a regular investigating agent of the defendant to go
I must say that I can see nothing to criticise unfavorably in the action of the defendant’s representative as having been hasty, inconsiderate or otherwise censurable. The trial justice charged that he was under no duty to ask the plaintiff for any explanation. Before taking Darragh’s affidavit he even cautioned him against making an untruthful statement therein. Darragh stated to him that he had been an inebriate for many years. There was nothing in his statement to indicate that his was not a genuine case of treatment by the plaintiff. Darragh was a witness at the trial of the criminal case, but was not produced at the trial herein nor his absence there accounted for. Apparently he had in the interim disappeared. There was no evidence in behalf of the plaintiff or otherwise to indicate that Darragh was generally unworthy of credence.
To my mind the case here was much stronger for the defendant than was the case in Rawson v. Leggett (supra). In that case plaintiff’s counsel maintained successfully, at least at the Trial Term and here in this court, that the facts that the informer there was himself the confessed thief, and that for some considerable time after he confessed he failed to declare that Rawson (the plaintiff) had had anything to do with the embezzlement; and that only later, when the head of the defendant firm, having him in its power, asserted to him that Rawson had received a certain amount of the stolen money (“Didn’t he?”), did the informer say, in effect, “No, not so much as that,” but only a certain sum, mentioning a much less one; and the further fact that Bawson had for many years been the trusted confidential credit man of the defendants, holding a .very important position with them, made it com
It is my conclusion, therefore, that Darragh’s statement and affidavit, coupled with that of Mrs. Benzecry, did constitute, as matter of law, probable cause for the criminal prosecution of the plaintiff.
Third. Assuming, as above, that the law of the case was correctly declared by the trial justice as above summarized, I think that probable cause was established because the evidence demonstrated that the advice or prescription of a licensed physician, upon which only plaintiff claimed the institute treated, was a mere sham and pretense. In all instances such prescription was merely treatment by the Gatlin method. Plaintiff’s preliminary statement to defendant’s representative was in effect that such would be the prescription in each case. The circular which he drew expressly so stated. There was in the prescription no modification or direction as to time or quantity of the dose, or anything of the sort. The medicine was a secret. Neither the plaintiff nor the physician knew its ingredients. The plaintiff had purchased from the parent institute at Chicago the right to use the remedy in New York, and obtained the medicine from there apparently in bulk. The giving of a prescription by a physician must of necessity involve the exercise of judgment as to the particular case, and as well some scientific knowledge of the nature of the medicine prescribed. Here the physician could have possessed no such knowledge, and even the plaintiff, the manager, did not have it. Hence such a prescription was a mere sham and pretense.
Fourth. The learned trial justice erred to the manifest prejudice of the defendant in several rulings as to matters of evidence.
(a) Upon the cross-examination of Dr. Upton, the physician of the institute, the inquiry to show that he made no analysis or other scientific examination to ascertain the ingredients of the medicine was excluded. This proof was entirely competent to show that the prescriptions given by the physician were mere pretenses based upon no scientific knowledge. Notwithstanding the somewhat evasive statements of the physician in his testimony, it is evident that he had no knowledge or information as to the ingredients of the medicine. Still the direct inquiry should have been allowed, and, as I think, the exception to its exclusion was not only technically but substantially good.
(b) Various inquiries as to the qualifications of Dyer, defendant’s lawyer representative who instituted the prosecution, were excluded. It appeared that defendant, in prosecuting the plaintiff, acted chiefly upon the advice of its junior counsel, Mr. Dyer. I think that evidence that the lawyer, upon whose advice as to the law and as to the weight of the evidence defendant relied, had had ample experience in that particular department of law, and further, that he had carefully read and considered the leading decisions of the courts upon the subject, was competent and of substantial weight, both on the issue of want of probable cause and upon that of malice as affecting the amount of the damages. Any evidence tending to show its good motives and the care which it exercised in making such prosecution was competent certainly upon the question of damages. The character and legal experience of the man whom it permitted to represent it in the matter constituted material and weighty proof upon that point. The irony of the situation is apparent from this record, by which it appears
Similar error was committed in excluding, over defendant’s objection and exception, like competent evidence as to the qualifications of Mr. Vandiver, defendant’s chief counsel, to whose final judgment Dyer submitted the case before beginning the prosecution. Like error was also committed in excluding in like manner evidence as to the qualifications of the investigator, Mrs. Benzecry, whom defendant’s such counsel employed to make a preliminary investigation of the matter.
(c) The trial court, upon plaintiff’s motion, struck out Dyer’s testimony that before taking Darragh’s affidavit he admonished him as to his liability for perjury in the event he made any untrue statement therein. That evidence was plainly competent, at least upon the question of the amount of damages and indeed, as I think, upon the issue of probable cause as well. To that ruling, however, defendant’s counsel took no exception.
Those several errors upon matters of evidence appear to indicate a substantial misconception as to the nature of the case and the governing rule as to damages.
The defendant was engaged in an entirely lawful and indeed, as the trial justice in effect told the jury, praiseworthy work of driving out of business quacks and unlawful practitioners, to the manifest benefit of the public. As Mr. Justice Carr, writing for this court in the McCarthy Case (supra) said, in effect, if one cannot in instituting a criminal prosecution rely upon such information as defendant’s representative here had “without subjecting oneself to pecuniary risk * * * it will become quite difficult to secure a prosecutor,
I regard the verdict here as directly against a sound and necessary public policy and am convinced that it should not stand. I advise, therefore, that the judgment and order appealed from be reversed, with costs, and that the complaint be dismissed, with costs.
Jenks, P. J., and Stapleton, J., concurred; Rich, J., read for affirmance.
See Laws of 1806, chap. 188, as amd.— [Rep.
Dissenting Opinion
I cannot agree that the trial court acted under “ an entirely mistaken theory of the law,” or that plaintiff should have been convicted, or that the trial court should'have found the existence of probable cause as a matter of law. In People ex rel. Lederman v. Warden of City Prison (168 App. Div. 240) the question of the right of an officer of a corporation authorized “ To maintain and operate institutes for the cure of the liquor and drug habit ” was not presented. In that case the defendant was an individual holding himself out to the world under a registered trade name, as being able to diagnose and treat diseases, and undertaking to do so. Notwithstanding this authority, which has tended to make me waver at times, I remain of the opinion that the corporation, having acquired the legal right to treat the drink and drug habit, could treat it as it saw fit, “ this side of giving drugs and medicine.”
I do not consider Matter of Co-Operative Law Co. (198 N. Y. 479) as an authority binding in the case at bar, because in that case the defendant, who was charged with the unlawful practice of the law, claimed to have acquired the right to do so through its incorporation under the Business Corporations Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 41 [Laws of 1892, chap. 691], as amd.; now Consol. Laws, chap. 4 [Laws of 1909, chap. 12], as amd.), which stated its objects to be, “ to furnish to its subscribers legal advice and service; to operate in connection with the above a department of law and collections for the use and benefit of the subscribers of the company only, and to accomplish these objects said company proposes to employ and maintain a staff of competent attorneys and counsellors at law
In the case at bar the corporation was not organized to practice medicine and did not claim the right to do so. It was organized “ To maintain and operate institutes for the cure of the liquor and drug habit.” I know of no provision of law making it unlawful to do this, to advertise for business, and to employ and furnish licensed physicians to prescribe for patients when necessary. I think it had the right to conduct its business in any manner it pleased, other than by prescribing and administering drugs and medicines. The only material issue presented in the trial court was that of the existence of probable cause, which was submitted to the jury as a question of fact without exception.
In reference to Darragh’s statement: Defendant’s acting representative, Dyer, testified that in causing plaintiff’s arrest he did not rely upon the statements or affidavit of Darragh, and was unable to point to anything in the affidavit of Mrs. Benzecry which led him to believe that plaintiff was practicing medicine. I believe Rawson v. Leggett (184 N. Y. 504) is also distinguished from the case at bar; in that case before causing plaintiff’s arrest, “an investigation which was cautious and painstaking in the extreme ” was made; here no such investigation was made. They acted solely on the statement and affidavit of Darragh, upon which they placed no weight and admittedly did not rely, and the report and affidavit of Mrs. Benzecry, which did not show the commission of any offense.
I think the defendant has been properly held to respond in damages, and, therefore, vote to affirm.
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.