101 Misc. 2d 49 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1979
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Order entered on April 11, 1978 (B. Cohen, J.) affirmed, with $10 costs.
Plaintiff sued for damages for false imprisonment on December 24, 1974, when he was shopping in defendant’s men’s furnishings department. There was conflicting testimony as to plaintiff’s location at the time he was stopped by a Mr. McDonald, a security employee of defendant. Plaintiff testified that he had an unpurchased hat in his hand when he stepped into the adjoining department to find his companions to show them the hat. McDonald’s testimony was that plaintiff was at least 25 feet into the next department headed for an exit door with the hat on his head. At the time plaintiff was stopped, the price tag affixed to the band was no longer on the hat.
At McDonald’s request, plaintiff accompanied him to the security offices, where McDonald searched the plaintiff, verified the price of the hat with the men’s department, and presented filled out forms for plaintiff to sign. Plaintiff was then photographed and fingerprinted, and released. Defendant filed no criminal charges.
Defendant claims to have detained plaintiff pursuant to section 218 of the General Business Law, which gives store owners a limited privilege to detain persons reasonably suspected of shoplifting. The law limits the manner and length of detention to reasonable standards.
Section 218 provides that in any action for false arrest, etc. brought by any person detained on the retail premises, "it shall be a defense to such action that the person was detained in a reasonable manner and for not more than a reasonable time to permit such investigation or questioning by a peace officer or by the owner of the retail mercantile establishment, his authorized employee or agent, and that such peace officer, owner, employee or agent had reasonable grounds to believe that the person so detained was committing or attempting to commit larceny on such premises of such merchandise. As used in this section, 'reasonable grounds’ shall include, but not be limited to, knowledge that a person has concealed
The Trial Judge instructed the jury, among other things, that: "In determining whether the manner of detention was reasonable, you may consider the activities of the defendant which were beyond those described in the statute, such as the searching of plaintiff and the photographing and fingerprinting”.
After the jury came back with a verdict in favor of the defendant department store, plaintiff moved to set aside the verdict. CPLR 4404 provides that after a trial by jury, the court may on its own initiative set aside a verdict and direct that judgment be entered in favor of a party entitled to it as a matter of law.
The trial court apparently had second thoughts about its submission of the case to the jury. It granted plaintiff’s motion to set aside the verdict in favor of defendant Bloomingdale’s and further, pursuant to CPLR 4404 granted judgment to plaintiff as a matter of law, directing a new trial on the issue of damages alone.
The lower court found that defendant Bloomingdale’s had exceeded conduct permitted under the statute by detaining plaintiff beyond preliminary questioning and checking, and having a statement signed and obtaining unauthorized fingerprints and photographs, which were not returned to plaintiff as required by former section 79-a of the Civil Rights Law.
Defendant contends in its appeal that the issue of whether or not defendant’s acts were reasonable, in their totality, was properly submitted to the jury and, therefore, that the verdict based upon a fair interpretation of the evidence should not be set aside.
The court, having properly determined that the provisions of section 218 of the General Business Law could not authorize fingerprinting and photography, should not have submitted this conduct to the jury as a question of fact. The Trial Judge redeemed herself from her erroneous charge by invoking CPLR 4404 after the verdict.
Concededly, the problem of pilferage in retail establish
Each year sees more pervasive encroachment on the liberties of our citizenry (see, Westin, Allen, Privacy and Freedom, 1967). Even though the Supreme Court of the United States has in recent years been more receptive to circumscribe certain individual liberties as against police authority, it has continued to be vigilant to guard against further invasion of personal privacy by others (Griswold v Connecticut, 381 US 479; Moore v City of East Cleveland, 431 US 494; Carey v Population Servs., 431 US 678; Roe v Wade, 410 US 113, 115; Matter of Kesselbrenner v Anonymous, 33 NY2d 161; Atkin v Onondaga County Bd. of Elections, 30 NY2d 401; Schulman v New York City Health and Hosps. Corp., 38 NY2d 234; Alevy v Downstate Med. Center, 39 NY2d 326; Montgomery v Daniels, 38 NY2d 41, 59-60; Matter of Rosenstock v Scaringe, 40 NY2d 563, 564).
High in the hierarchy of such concern for individual liberty must be security from such mental and physical intrusion as is presented by unauthorized fingerprinting and photographing resorted to in the case before the court.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I respectfully dissent and would reverse the order appealed from and direct that the jury’s verdict be reinstated.
A review of the record before the court reveals that the defendant had reasonable cause to detain the plaintiff, and indeed the trial court expressly so found. The trial court, however, in setting aside the jury verdict in favor of the defendant, found that defendant’s conduct of photographing and fingerprinting the plaintiff transformed an otherwise proper detention into false imprisonment. Plaintiff suggests no cause of action specifically addressed to the allegedly improper photographing and fingerprinting, electing to pursue the more amorphous cause of action of false arrest.
Trial Term in setting aside the jury’s verdict seems overly preoccupied with the provisions of section 218 of the General
One has no absolute right not to be photographed, and indeed today in banks and mercantile establishments patrons are routinely photographed by closed circuit video trap cameras. To the extent that fingerprinting may be shown to involve elements of either assault or battery it is of course actionable conduct, but fingerprinting does not per se represent false imprisonment.
There is no indication in the record that the plaintiff at any time refused to be photographed or fingerprinted, and the jury may well have concluded that the plaintiff, at least implicitly, consented to such conduct on the part of the defendant. Since there is no statutory proscription against photographing or fingerprinting persons detained under the presented circumstances, it was for the jury to assess whether the manner of the plaintiffs detention was reasonable. The jury having concluded that the plaintiff was indeed detained in a reasonable manner, I perceive no reason to disturb their finding.
Concur: Hughes, J. P., and Asch, J.; Riccobono, J. dissenting.