132 N.Y.S. 1085 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
This action was brought to recover damages for malicious prosecution and false arrest. At the trial the complaint was' dismissed, so far as a recovery was sought for malicious prosecution, and submitted to the jury to determine the damages sustained by the plaintiff for the arrest. The plaintiff had a verdict for $2,000, which was reduced to $1,000, and'from a judgment entered thereon this appeal is taken, as well as from an order denying a motion for a new trial.
The material facts involved are not disputed and are as follows: On November 30, 1908, between twelve and one o’clock at night, the plaintiff was arrested as he was entering his rooms at 146 West Ninety-fourth street in the city of New York, by the defendant and another, both of whom were members- of the police force of such city. The arrest was made under a warrant dated November 20, 1908, issued by an alderman of Wilkesbarre, Penn., directed to a constable in Luzerne county in that State, commanding him to arrest the plaintiff and certain other persons named, and bring them before the officer issuing the warrant to answer the charge of “ unlawfully, wilfully, falsely and maliciously ” conspiring to cheat and defraud the Howell & Kings Company out of $1,800.
During the course of the trial it was conceded by the defendant’s counsel that the charge made against the plaintiff in the State of Pennsylvania was a misdemeanor under the laws of
The crime charged in the warrant, under our statute, is a misdemeanor. (Penal Code, § 168; now Penal Law, § 580.) The concession established, at least for the purposes of the trial, that such crime was only a misdemenor under the laws of Pennsylvania. The defendant was a peace officer, and as such had the right to make an arrest. (Code Grim. Proc. § 168.) But he could only arrest without a warrant for a crime committed, or attempted, in his presence, or when the person arrested had committed a felony, or when a felony had in fact been committed, and there was reasonable cause for believing the person arrested had committed it. (Id. § 177.) And for a misdemeanor an arrest could not be made at night, even with a warrant, unless by direction of the magistrate indorsed upon it. (Id. § 170.) Here no crime had been committed or attempted in the presence of the defendant, and the. one charged in the Pennsylvania warrant was, by concession,- a misdemeanor. Therefore, the defendant had no authority to arrest the plaintiff. If the plaintiff had committed the crime charged in the warrant, and had fled the jurisdiction of the State of Pennsylvania, then the proper authority had the right to request the Governor of this State to send him back for trial (Code Grim. Proc. § 827), and as a preliminary proceeding to the issuing of a requisition by the Governor of the State of Pennsylvania upon the Governor of this State for the arrest and return of the plaintiff a magistrate could issue a warrant. (Id. § 828.) But in that case the proceedings for his arrest and commitment are governed by section 829 of the- Code of Criminal Procedure, which provides that they “ are in all respects similar to those provided in this Code for the arrest and commitment of a person charged with a public offense committed in this State, ” except that an exemplified copy of certain papers may be received in evidence before the magistrate.
In Snead v. Bonnoil (166 N. Y. 325) it was held that an arrest upon the ground of the commission of one crime was not justified by the fact that the person arrested had committed another.
Not only this, but such proof'was inadmissible -under the defendant’s answer. The only defense set up was to the effect that the defendant acted under the warrant issued by the Pennsylvania authorities. There is not a single fact to the effect that the arrest was made because a felony had been committed in the State of Pennsylvania, and the defendant had reasonable grounds for believing that the plaintiff had committed it and that the arrest was made on this ground. Nor was such proof admissible .in mitigation of damages because it was not pleaded. (Bradner v. Faulkner, 93 N. Y. 515; Murphy v. Eidlitz, No. 2, 121 App. Div. 224.) The only facts pleaded in mitigation are that “ all of said acts in reference to said information and warrant were performed by him in good faith, without malice, and honestly and in good faith believing that the plaintiff was one of the persons mentioned' and described in the aforesaid warrant and guilty of the offenses therein
I am of the opinion that the judgment and order appealed from are right and should be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Clarke, Scott and Dowling, JJ., Concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.