67 N.Y.S. 651 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The action was brought for false imprisonment. As the complaint was dismissed at the close of the plaintiff’s case, the only question here is whether, giving to her evidence the construction most favorable to her, and drawing all inferences in her favor, there was anything to be submitted to the jury. The defendant is the proprietor of a line of steamboats running from Newburg to New York, on one of which Mrs. McKay took passage on the 2d of September, 1898. Upon reaching New York she started to leave the boat. The pier at which the boat landed was leased by the city to one Van Santvoord, to whom the defendant pays an annual rent for the privilege of stopping at his pier and delivering passengers and freight. At a short distance from the end of the pier the defendant has constructed a fence, with a gate, through which passengers leaving the boat must pass, and where they deliver their tickets as they go through. As Mrs. McKay was leaving the boat a woman came up to her and claimed the satchel which Mrs. McKay had in her hand, insisting that it had been stolen. Mrs. McKay repulsed the woman, and went on off the boat. Upon reaching the gate she delivered up her ticket and passed on out, and after she had got beyond the gate the woman approached her again, still •claiming that Mrs. McKay had stolen the satchel, and attempted to take it from her. Upon this an altercation took place between the two women, and the purser of the boat, observing it, inquired into the matter, and, when it was explained to him, told them to come over to the waiting room, where the matter could be settled. The two women went with the purser to the room, the door was locked, Mrs. McKay was asked to describe the contents of the •satchel, which she did, and it was thereupon delivered to her: and
Without considering, therefore, whether the act of the purser constituted an arrest for which he would have been liable, it is sufficient • to say that whatever he did was outside of any authority which appears to have been vested in him by the defendant. For that reason the conclusion of the court below was correct, and this judgment and order must be affirmed, with costs. All concur.