142 N.Y. 492 | NY | 1894
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This action was brought to recover damages for the malicious prosecution of a civil action. Whether such an action may be maintained, regardless of whether the plaintiff in the former action had interfered with either the person or property of the defendant therein, is a question we are not called upon to determine. The general rule at common law that an ordinary action, maliciously brought and without probable cause, which had terminated in favor of the defendant, gave rise to a right of action, certainly seems to have disappeared in England with the enactment of statutes giving costs to successful defendants. (3 Blackst. Com. 126 [Chitty's notes]; Quartz Hill, etc., Co. v.Eyre, L.R. [11 Q.B. Div.] 674, 683.) In this country the authorities are not agreed upon the doctrine governing such actions; as may be seen by reference to the cases collated in the American and English Encyclop. of Law (vol. 14, p. 32). But I am prepared to assume that there may be satisfactory authority for holding that where a party has been subjected to some special, or added, grievance, as by an interference with his person, or property, in a civil action, brought without probable cause, he may maintain a subsequent action to recover any legal damage, which he avers, and is able to show, to have been occasioned to him. (See Bump v. Betts, 19 Wend. 421; Whipple v. Fuller,
A review of the facts will make this clear and seems justified by the magnitude of the recovery at the Circuit and the subsequent affirmance of the judgment by the General Term.
In 1886 the plaintiff, Willard, was the treasurer and the general manager of the defendant, a Connecticut corporation styled Holmes, Booth and Haydens, which was chartered for the purpose of manufacturing and dealing in brass, copper and German-silver goods etc. etc. Willard had been intrusted by the directors with a management of the company's business, which was, practically, uncontrolled. He had executed a contract between the company and the Forest City Carbon Company, a corporation in Ohio, engaged in manufacturing carbons for electric lighting purposes; under which the latter company was to sell all of its manufactures to the Holmes etc. Company. The Carbon Company desired to increase its facilities and to extend its plant and, in July 1886, made an arrangement with Willard, who undertook to procure the means by lending his company's credit. It made its promissory note to the order of the Holmes Company for $10,000; which Willard indorsed in the name of the payee and procured to be discounted; remitting the proceeds to the Carbon Company. Before the maturity of this note, Willard resigned from the Holmes Company. In November 1886, the Carbon Company, being unable to meet its maturing note, sent on another note for $10,000, made to the order of the Holmes Company, *498
to Adams, then the agent of the latter company. Adams indorsed the note with the payee's name and procured its discount. The company's check for $10,000 was then sent to the Carbon Company; which that company used to take up its July note. During and prior to these transactions Willard and Adams were also interested, as stockholders, in the Carbon Company. After Willard left the service of the Holmes Company, Wayland, its president, succeeded him as treasurer and general manager, in the latter part of January, or early in February. Being made aware of the outstanding liability of the company as indorser upon the note, and being informed that the maker was unable to provide for its payment, he procured the discount of another note of the Carbon Company, for the same amount, at the bank and the proceeds being credited to the Holmes Company, the November note when due was charged to its account. At the time, Wayland was ignorant of the facts attending the making of the note, and supposed it related to the renewal of some customer's note. Upon investigation, he discovered the history of the matter and that, at the time when Willard, in July 1886, had agreed to lend the credit of the company in aid of the Carbon Company, in the manner mentioned, that company, with a capital of only $25,000, was already indebted to the Holmes Company in the sum of $22,338.47, and that a first note had been paid with funds furnished by his company. He at once consulted with the company's attorney and was advised that the company could recover damages against Willard, measured by the amount which the company had had to pay upon the note. A complaint was prepared and sworn to; which charged Willard with having indorsed the company's name upon the Carbon Company's note, without consideration received by the former company and without authority; with having remitted the proceeds of the discount thereof to the sole benefit and use of the Carbon Company and that the Holmes Company had been obliged to pay the same at maturity. Judgment was demanded against Willard for damages to the amount of the note. An affidavit was *499
also prepared and sworn to; which set forth the defendant Willard's non-residence; the cause of action and that the source of the information of Wayland, the deponent, was in an inspection of the books and records of the plaintiff company. Prior to the actual commencement of the action, however, Wayland had an interview with Willard; in consequence of which Willard consented to attend at a meeting of the directors of the Holmes Company, and he then explained to them the purpose of the note transaction in July 1886; namely, to enable the Carbon Company to supply them with carbons in larger quantities and he claimed to have acted legitimately. He was asked to secure the company against loss by assigning some of his securities; but he declined to do so and the directors, refusing to excuse him, advised Wayland to proceed with the action; which was at once done. When the action came on for trial, the complaint was dismissed and judgment ordered in favor of Willard; which was, eventually, affirmed in this court. (
Without going further into the evidence, we think the plaintiff failed to show that this defendant was without reasonable grounds for the belief that he was liable in damages. There was reasonable ground, in the discovery by the directors of the facts connected with Willard's transactions, upon which to found a genuine belief that a cause of action existed against him and, with the advice of counsel, there was justification for their *503
proceeding; in the facts, if not in the law. They were bound to predicate their action upon facts, real, or honestly supposed; but they were not to come under legal condemnation, for not having anticipated the legal conclusion of the court from the facts as proved. In this, as in every such case, the question is not what the actual facts were upon which the action was taken; but what the defendant had reason to believe they were, and if they furnished reasonable cause for instituting the proceeding complained of, its failure is no evidence of want of probable cause or of malice. (Stewart v. Sonneborn,
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered: with costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.