756 N.Y.S.2d 302 | N.Y. App. Div. | 2003
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims (Lebous, J.), entered October 9, 2001, upon a decision of the court in favor of defendant.
In November 1997, State Police Investigator Michael Tullo, acting in an undercover capacity as part of a joint effort between the State Police Community Narcotics Enforcement Team (CNET) and the Chenango County Drug Enforcement Unit,
Claimant filed a claim against defendant alleging negligence, false imprisonment, false arrest and malicious prosecution stemming from the misidentification and arrest. After trial, the Court of Claims dismissed the claim, finding that, inter alia, malicious prosecution, rather than false imprisonment, is the proper theory of recovery where, as here, an arrest is made pursuant to a valid warrant; The court further found that, under the circumstances, and in the absence of expert proof of the applicable police procedures, claimant “failed to overcome the presumption of probable cause which flowed from the Grand Jury indictment.” Claimant appeals and we affirm.
On this appeal, claimant contends that the Court of Claims improperly determined that she failed to establish an essential element of a claim for malicious prosecution, namely the absence of probable cause, by implying that she had not car
Here, claimant does not allege that defendant committed fraud or perjury or suppressed evidence. Rather, it is claimant’s contention that the State Police undercover agent deviated from the normal and usual practice in identification of claimant by failing to check the ownership of the vehicle in which the drug seller arrived and by failing to make a confirmatory photo identification or view a photo array until six months after the drug sale. The testimony adduced at trial established that all the officers involved during the subject drug “buy” followed standard operating procedures and claimant failed to substantiate her claim to the contrary (see Boomer v State of New York, supra at 731). “While confirmatory identification procedures could have been followed, their omission does not establish improper (much less egregious) police conduct” (id. at 731 [citation omitted]; see Gisondi v Town of Harrison, supra at 285). Under the circumstances, the procedures followed do not constitute improper police activity “as to demonstrate an inten
Claimant’s reliance upon Hernandez v State of New York (supra) to support the proposition that the Court of Claims improperly concluded that expert testimony was required to find that defendant acted with malice is not well placed. As this Court recently observed in Boomer v State of New York (supra): “[In Hernandez], when the Trooper discovered his own misidentification of the claimant as the defendant in a criminal action, he immediately reported it to his superiors who did nothing for 10 months. It was such knowledge of misidentification, coupled with inactivity, that was the lynchpin for liability in Hernandez” (id. at 731).
It is undisputed in this case that the police had no knowledge of misidentification and, therefore, could not have failed to act on such knowledge. Rather, Tullo testified that following his identification of claimant, he had no contact with the District Attorney and had no knowledge as to why the case against claimant had been dismissed. The failure of claimant in any manner to produce evidence that defendant deviated from acceptable police activity so as to demonstrate an “intentional or reckless disregard for proper procedures” (Hernandez v State of New York, supra at 904) is fatal to her claim. For these reasons, we conclude that the Court of Claims properly dismissed the malicious prosecution cause of action.
Crew III, J.P., Peters, Rose and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed, without costs.
The unit of which Tullo was a part consisted of police from the City of Elmira and the Town of Horseheads, in Chemung County, and the Chemung County Sheriffs Department.