91 A.D.2d 1190 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1983
— Order unanimously modified and, as modified, affirmed, without costs, in accordancfe with the following memorandum: Emma Smith died in 1979 leaving a will naming her son, defendant Donald Smith, as executor and sole beneficiary. Smith renounced his appointment in favor of his maternal uncle, plaintiff Joseph Petrus. When Petrus claimed executor commissions in excess of those allowed by law, Smith hired defendant Victor Chambers, an attorney, to bring an accounting proceeding. A hearing was conducted and' thereafter, outside the courthouse, Chambers called Petrus a liar and a thief in the presence of Petrus and his attorney. The next day Chambers appeared before the Surrogate, ex parte, and handed over rent receipts from a tenant of the estate, presumably establishing that Petrus had pocketed the money and perjured himself at the accounting proceeding. The Surrogate turned the matter over to the District Attorney, who called in the State Police to investigate. The matter was turned over to a Grand Jury which no-billed Petrus, who thereafter sued, alleging nine causes of action including slander, malicious prosecution, false arrest, civil conspiracy; and intentional tort. Upon a motion to dismiss, Special Term dismissed all causes of action except the fifth, alleging malicious prosecution and false arrest. All parties have appealed. We agree that Chambers’ remarks to the Surrogate are cloaked with absolute immunity as statements made in the course of judicial proceedings (see Martirano v Frost, 25 NY2d 505, 507; Restatement, Torts 2d, § 586), and thus the third and fourth causes of action were properly dismissed. Chambers’ gratuitous opinion calling Petrus a liar and a thief is not similarly immune, however. While immunity is not limited to in-court statements (see Klein v McGauley, 29 AD2d 418, 420), it does not extend to the instant situation (cf. Uni-Service Risk Mgt. v New York State Assn. of School Business Officials, 62 AD2d 1093 [finding no immunity for defendant’s statement that plaintiff had misappropriated funds, made after an examination before trial (EBT) had been taken]). We agree that the statement is protected by a