82 A.D. 404 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
In this action the plaintiff has recovered $650 damages for the malicious prosecution of a civil proceeding for contempt, which ¡resulted in an order of commitment under which the plaintiff was imprisoned for three days. The determination of the appeal turns upon the question whether the order adjudging the plaintiff guilty of contempt and directing that he be committed to jail was conclusive evidence of the existence of probable cause for instituting the contempt proceeding, notwithstanding the subsequent reversal of that order by this court. (Burnham v. Denike, 53 App. Div. 407.) '
The effect to be given to the judgment, rendered in the suit
The rule thus enunciated and approved makes the probative effect of the judgment depend upon the means by which it was procured; that is to say, it is to be deemed conclusive proof that the prosecutor of the suit in which it was rendered acted with probable cause, unless the plaintiff who attacks that suit as a malicious prosecution alleges and proves that the judgment was obtained by what the Supreme Court of Maine denominates “ undue means.’7 (See Spring & Stepp v. Besore, 12 B. Mon. [Ky.] 551.) The Maine cases show that in that State this phrase is intended to include false testimony by the complainant, whereby the judgment was procured. Thus in' Witham v. Gowen (14 Maine, 362) the court sustained a ruling in an action for malicious prosecution, holding a record of conviction before a justice of the peace to be conclusive proof of probable cause, unless the plaintiff in the malicious prosecution suit could prove that the conviction before the justice was obtained exclusively or mainly upon the testimony of the defendant and that such testimony was false. In Iowa it is also held that proof that a conviction was based upon false and perjured testimony will prevent such conviction from being deemed conclusive evidence of probable cause in an action for maliciously prosecuting the proceeding which resulted in the conviction. (Bowman v. Brown, 52 Iowa, 437.) And a similar rule has been declared to be equally applicable in a suit brought for maliciously instituting a civil action. (Short & Co. v. Spragins, Buck & Co., 104 Ga. 628.)
The prosecution which is attacked as malicious in the present case was a civil proceeding to punish the plaintiff for contempt in having failed to comply with an order of the Supreme Court requiring him to complete a purchase at a judicial sale. That order was made upon
It is evident that in so doing the judge gave credence to the statements in the defendant’s affidavit to the effect that the delay of the plaintiff had increased 1ns burdens in the way of taxes and assessments. Otherwise the direction that the plaintiff be detained in close custody in jail until he paid all taxes, assessments and water rents which had accrued since the date fixed for passing the title Would hardly have been inserted in the order. Upon the trial of the present action, however, the plaintiff proved that no assessment or tax had been in fact levied or laid upon the property in question between the time fixed for passing the title and the date when the defendant’s affidavit was verified. It is thus apparent that one of the most objectionable provisions of the order of commitment, i. e.} that requiring the payment of the taxes and assessments, was based wholly on a false statement of fact in the defendant’s affidavit. These circumstances seem to make out a pretty clear case of obtaining an adjudication by “ undue means,” within the authorities cited, particularly in view of the admission of the defendant that he did not read his own affidavit; that it was not read to him, and that he signed it without knowing its contents, ifotwithstanding his ignorance it was effective enough to send the plaintiff to jail.
It is to be observed that the final order in the contempt proceeding, under which the. plaintiff was imprisoned, was made after.a
In Nicholson v. Sternberg (61 App. Div. 51), decided in April, 1901, the Appellate Division in the fourth department held that a judgment of conviction rendered by a justice of the peace is not conclusive evidence, but is merely prima faoie evidence of probable cause for a prosecution alleged to have been malicious. If that proposition be correct, and no greater efficacy is to be given to' an adjudication in a contempt proceeding made upon affidavits, it follows that all due weight was assigned to the order of commitment in the case at bar, irrespective of the falsity of the affidavit upon which it was procured. In either view there was no error in the manner in which the order was treated.
If it were necessary to do so in order to sustain this judgment, I think we might well hold that an order obtained from a court upon an affidavit so recklessly made that the affiant is wholly ignorant of its contents, affords no protection whatever to such affiant as evidence of probable cause or anything else ; and that malice is also inferable from the wanton disregard of the rights of others involved in swearing of this sort, and placing the affidavit in the hands of an attorney who uses it as a weapoii of incarceration.
No other question is raised by the appellant which calls for discussion. I think the judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Goodrich, P. J., Hirschberg, Jenks and Hooker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.