81 N.Y. 428 | NY | 1880
The prosecution of which the plaintiff complains was set on foot by the defendants Krekeler and Frost. It rested upon an affidavit drawn by Frost as attorney for Mrs. Krekeler, and verified by her. The part material to this case is in these words: "On the 17th day of April, 1871, at the house known as No. 9 Jay street, in the fifth ward of the city of New York, was feloniously taken, stolen and carried away from the possession of deponent, the following property, viz.," describing two deeds conveying real estate, the one executed by plaintiff to Maria Stoddard and the other from said grantee to the affiant. "That the property mentioned in the said two deeds and transferred to this deponent was of the value of eighteen thousand dollars, the property of this deponent, and that this deponent had a probable cause to suspect, *432 and does suspect, that the said property was feloniously taken, stolen and carried away by Henry W. Thaule."
"That at the time and place as aforesaid the said Henry W. Thaule came and told deponent that her deeds were not in order, meaning thereby that something about the acknowledgment was omitted, and deponent went and got said deeds, when the said Henry W. Thaule snatched or took them out of her hands, against her will and consent, and put them in his, Henry W. Thaule's, pocket, against her will and consent, when deponent demanded the said deeds from him, which he refused to give up, and told deponent that he woutd not give them up, when deponent tried to take them away from him, and he then and there resisted her with force and violence, and took them away against her will and consent, and before the two deeds were recorded."
It thus appears that while the charge of larceny is made in technical terms, the facts and circumstances on which it stands are stated, and if they are true, this action cannot be maintained. The affiant is responsible for those statements, but not for the legal conclusion drawn therefrom either by the police magistrate, or the district attorney or grand jury. (Dennis v.Ryan,
2d. There is another view of this case, also fatal to the plaintiff's right of action, and it is warranted by the evidence produced by him upon the trial of this action, and before he rested. The defendant could not be legally called upon to go into a defense until the plaintiff had established, first, the want of a reasonable and probable cause for the complaint made by her (Williams v. Taylor, 6 Bing. 183), and second, that it was instituted for malice. Upon both propositions he held the *434
affirmative, and as to the first was bound to give in evidence facts sufficient to satisfy a reasonable mind that his accuser had no ground for the proceeding, but a desire to injure him (Williams v. Taylor, supra) ; and whether he had done so, was for the court to determine as matter of law, after assuming that the evidence was true. (Stewart v. Sonneborn,
3d. There was also error in the conduct of the trial. The plaintiff, when under examination as a witness in his own behalf, before any evidence had been given by the defendant, and after stating the manner in which he obtained the deeds from Mrs. Krekeler, and the fact that she afterward brought a suit against him to set aside the conveyances which he had made subsequent thereto, was asked by his counsel, "and you made an offer there in court to convey it to them, if they would pay the expenses you had been put to, in the presence of Mrs. Krekeler, did you not?" And a like question as to a similar offer in Justice QUINN's court. Both questions were admitted *435 after objection by the defendant, and after exception by her to the ruling, the witness answered in the affirmative. I am unable to see any legitimate purpose for which that evidence was received. Upon the question of malice, or probable cause for the prosecution, it could have no bearing. If the deeds were taken by violence, and the property fraudulently conveyed, could the fact that thereafter, when brought into court to cancel the fraudulent conveyance, he offered to anticipate the judgment of the court by conveying it for a price to be paid, have any tendency to support the burden he had undertaken, of carrying to a successful termination, the issues presented by those questions? It might palliate, in the mind of an unthinking person, happening on the jury, the wrong he had committed, but could have no legal tendency to support a verdict.
4th. It was error, also, to exclude the question propounded by the defendant's counsel to Mrs. Krekeler: "Had Mr. Thaule deeded this property to any one else, about this time?" That is about the time the charge was made by her. In view of the facts already referred to, that the deed under which the defendant claimed had been executed by the plaintiff, but was still unrecorded, it was proper to show the manner in which he subsequently dealt with the property. It bore directly both upon his motive in getting possession of the deeds, and the grounds which Mrs. Krekeler had for the suspicions stated in her affidavit, and upon the existence of probable cause of action. These considerations require a reversal of the judgment.
It should also be noticed that the allegations in the complaint, that the indictment was dismissed after the complainant therein (the defendant here) had been heard, are not sustained by the evidence. She only heard of it after it was done. She then protested against it with bitter earnestness, desired the district attorney to procure a new one, and failing in that desire, sought his removal. She was, at least, in earnest, and full of faith that her complaint was well founded. Nevertheless, the district attorney may have acted wisely. But he consented to nolle prosequi, under the belief that by a decision at Special *436 Term, adverse to the plaintiff's claim to the property as against Thaule, the questions involved in the indictment had been in a civil suit disposed of. If they were the same questions, a subsequent reversal of the judgment of Special Term shows that the decision on which the district attorney relied was erroneous, and the reversal was put by the General Term on grounds which go far to sustain the defense in the present action. If there was not, in the discharge of the defendant from that indictment, a miscarriage of justice, and an escape of a guilty person, Mrs. Krekeler has, at least, been hardly dealt with. Concerning property conceded to be her own, she has been driven to many lawsuits which, however terminating, must have subjected her to large expense and annoyance. In that litigation, the substantial questions stand decided in her favor, yet we have now before us a judgment calling from her a large sum of money by way of compensation to her adversary, who, upon his own showing, sought to withhold from her that which was her own, and whose conduct raised in her well-grounded suspicions that a crime had been committed, of which the public prosecutor might take notice. It is a satisfaction to know that the rules of law require its reversal.
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted.
All concur; FOLGER, Ch. J., concurring on ground of erroneous ruling on trial.
Judgment reversed.