120 N.Y. 223 | NY | 1890
The only question requiring consideration is presented by an exception to the charge. The court instructed the jury that the plaintiff did not commit an offense and defendant did not have probable cause to believe that he had, and submitted to their consideration the question of malice only. The defendant excepted. Where facts are undisputed and but one inference can be drawn from them, the question of probable cause is one of law for the court.
The facts, so far as that proposition is concerned, are not in dispute. If then, they do not permit an inference that defendant had probable cause to believe that the plaintiff had committed an offense against the law, the instruction was right.
The defendant furnished to the plaintiff a quantity of rugs under an agreement which provided that when called upon to do so by the defendant, the plaintiff should return the rugs to the defendant in good order, or the cash, or a properly signed lease for the same.
In March of the year following the defendant placed in the hands of his attorney a statement of the rugs, which he claimed the plaintiff had not returned or accounted for, as provided by the agreement. The amount claimed to be *226 unpaid was $88.25. After notice the plaintiff called upon the attorney and disputed the correctness of the account. He tendered to defendant, personally, the sum of $42.00, at the same time insisting that it was the only sum owing by him. It was finally agreed that the defendant should receive in full settlement of the account, and, consequently, in payment of the rugs theretofore delivered, $36.25 in money and thirteen Smyrna thirty-inch rugs. As to the quality and character of the rugs to be delivered pursuant to this settlement the parties differ.
That difference, however, is of no importance here, except in so far as it throws light upon the after conduct of the parties.
Subsequently the plaintiff, in two installments, paid the sum of money agreed upon. When he made the last payment he presented an excuse for his failure to deliver the rugs called for by the settlement and promised that it should be done in a few days. Two or three hours before such payment and conversation, the defendant, accompanied by his attorney, had gone before a committing magistrate and made complaint in writing that the plaintiff had appropriated to his own use a rug belonging to the defendant. The rug referred to being one of those embraced in the statement which formed the basis of the settlement heretofore alluded to.
A warrant was issued thereon the same day, but the defendant was not apprehended for several weeks thereafter. When the defendant received the last installment of money he did not inform the plaintiff of the steps he had taken to procure his arrest. And for some reason, not explained, the warrant was not, in fact, served until after the purchase and delivery to the defendant of thirteen rugs, which plaintiff claimed was in strict fulfillment of the terms of settlement.
The defendant refused to receive them because they were not John Bromley Son's rugs, and, therefore, as he claimed, not in accordance with the agreement.
Now, can it be said that these facts permit an inference that the defendant had probable cause to believe that the plaintiff was guilty of larceny? *227
By the original agreement plaintiff had the right to take the rugs, sell, lease or keep them in his possession until after demand made for their return by the defendant. Not until after demand and refusal could the plaintiff be in the wrong. But the right to make such demand, as to this rug, was waived by the defendant when he made the agreement of settlement to which we have referred. Thereafter the plaintiff had the right to the possession of the rug.
The fact that his counsel may have advised him otherwise, while proper upon the question of malice, does not form the basis for a finding of fact that he had probable cause to believe the plaintiff guilty of larceny. Probable cause may be founded on misinformation as to the facts, but not as to the law.
The facts within his knowledge did not indicate that a crime had been committed. They did not tend to cause a man with knowledge of the law to suspect or believe that it had been violated, and the defendant was bound to know the law.
The court, therefore, rightly instructed the jury, as a matter of law, that the defendant, in causing the arrest of the plaintiff, did so without probable cause to believe that an offense had been committed by the plaintiff. One of the reasons assigned, inadvertently, as we think, by the trial judge for such instruction was not well founded. He asserted that no offense having been committed there could not be probable cause to justify the action of defendant. On the contrary, the rule is that whether a person have probable cause to make a criminal accusation against another is not necessarily dependent "upon the guilt or innocence of the accused, or upon the fact whether a crime has been committed. * * * If the apparent facts are such that a discreet and prudent person would be led to the belief that a crime has been committed by the person charged he will be justified, though it turns out that he was deceived, and that the party accused was innocent." (Carl v. Ayers,
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.