832 N.Y.S.2d 270 | N.Y. App. Div. | 2007
In an action, inter alia, to recover damages for malicious prosecution, the defendant Comp USA, Inc., appeals, as limited by its brief, from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Rockland County (Weiner, J.), dated March 30, 2006, as, in effect, denied those branches of their motion which were to dismiss the causes of action alleging malicious prosecution, defamation, and false arrest.
Ordered that the order is reversed insofar as appealed from, on the law, with costs, and those branches of the motion which were to dismiss the causes of action alleging malicious prosecution, defamation, and false arrest are granted.
As the plaintiffs conceded at oral argument, the causes of action alleging defamation and false arrest were interposed after the expiration of the applicable one-year statute of limitations (see CPLR 215 [3]; Bonanno v City of Rye, 280 AD2d 630 [2001]; Losco Group v Yonkers Residential Ctr., 276 AD2d 532, 533 [2000]). Accordingly, those causes of action should have been dismissed.
The tort of malicious prosecution has four elements: (1) commencement of a criminal proceeding, which (2) terminated in
In an effort to avoid the statute of limitations on the malicious prosecution cause of action, in their brief on appeal, the plaintiffs state that it is “not clear if the [pertinent accusatory instrument] has been dismissed in its entirety.” If that is the case, then an essential element of the tort of malicious prosecution (termination of the underlying criminal proceeding) is absent, and the cause of action should be dismissed for that reason.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court should have granted that branch of the defendants’ motion which was to dismiss the cause of action alleging malicious prosecution.
The plaintiffs’ remaining contentions are without merit. Miller, J.P, Spolzino, Goldstein and McCarthy, JJ., concur.