68 A.D.2d 902 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1979
In an action to recover damages for malicious prosecution, (1) defendants City of Mount Vernon and Jerry Barbagallo appeal (a) from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Westchester County, entered January 18, 1978, which is in favor of the plaintiff in the principal sum of $155,000, representing compensatory damages, upon a jury verdict, (b) as limited by their brief, from so much of an amended order of the same court, dated January 24, 1978, as denied their motion to set aside the verdict, and (2) the plaintiff cross-appeals from so much of the judgment as failed to award him punitive damages (the trial court granted a posttrial motion to set aside the jury’s award of punitive damages against defendant Barbagallo). Judgment reversed, on the law and. the facts, without costs or disbursements, and complaint dismissed. Appeal from the amended order dismissed, without costs or disbursements, in light of the determination on the appeal from the judgment. Two days after plaintiff was paroled from prison, where he was serving a sentence for a robbery conviction, he was arrested and charged with the armed robbery of defendant Mary Pulas in the florist shop she owns with her husband in Mount Vernon. The shop is located on South Fifth Avenue near West First Street. The patrolman who arrived at the shop radioed the robber’s description given him by Mrs. Pulas: a Black man of medium height, wearing black pants, a white shirt with pearl buttons, carrying a green jacket and wearing sunglasses. Defendants Barbagallo and Paldino, who received the radio call in their unmarked car, picked plaintiff up a few blocks from the store within minutes of the robbery. Plaintiff ñt the description in every detail. Based on Mrs. Pulas’ identification, both (a) of plaintiff as the robber before the Grand Jury, and (b) of the currency that was taken from plaintiff at the police station, and which bore a "W” in the corner, plaintiff was indicted. His first trial ended in a "hung jury”; he was acquitted after the second trial. In this action to recover damages for malicious prosecution, plaintiff maintains that appellant Barbagallo was motivated to proceed against him out of sheer malice, evidenced, for example, by Barbagallo’s disregard of plaintiff’s protestations that he was elsewhere in Mount Vernon at the time the robbery was committed, and that had Barbagallo made a proper investigation, he would have found he had the wrong man. Plaintiff implies that Barbagallo also acted out of malice on the basis of plaintiff’s race and status as an ex-convict. The verdict was in favor of defendants Pulas and Paldino