Filed Date: 11/15/1904
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This case has been before this court upon an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff in a former trial. 43 Misc. Rep. 59.
The plaintiff upon the first trial complained for “ wrongful detention, money had and received.” Upon the present trial the plaintiff’s counsel upon being asked upon what cause of action he desired to go to the jury said “wrongful detention of property in consequence of fraud, whereby plaintiff rescinds her contract * * *. Fraud and wrongful detention of property.”
It appears by this and also from the testimony given that the plaintiff has substantially changed her cause of action from that upon the former trial.
Upon that trial no pretense was made but that the defendant had been employed by the plaintiff to begin an action for slander against one Smith; that plaintiff paid defendant the sum of $100, for services to be rendered in such action; that she desired to have Smith arrested, and that defendant prepared papers with that object in view, and told plaintiff to procure two sureties to go upon the undertaking to be given; that subsequently plaintiff "changed her mind and decided to abandon the case.
Upon this trial the plaintiff’s husband testified that the defendant stated that he would “ take the man back to the same court, the Police Court.”
The plaintiff gave substantially the same testimony in
Upon this theory, practically suggested by the court, the case was allowed to go to the jury, the. judge charging as follows: “ Gentlemen of the Jury: Mr. Levy was retained by plaintiff in this action, and the question for you to decide is, was he retained to commence criminal proceedings, or was he retained for the purpose of commencing a civil action against this man whom the plaintiff believed she had a grievance against.
“ Her contention is that- after she had left the Police Court she went into Levy’s office; that she was angry and humiliated by reason of the fact that the defendant in the Police Court had been discharged; that she wanted
“ Mr. Levy has presented in evidence a written retainer, which recites that he was retained to begin proceedings for malicious slander against Ernest Smith. That retainer might be a retainer to begin proceedings criminally for malicious slander, and it is for you to say from the evidence that has been presented to you to-day whether or- not the defendant was employed to commence proceedings in a Police Court for the purpose of making this man go on his knees, as Levy expressed it, or whether he was retained to commence proceedings in a civil court to obtain money compensation for the use of the words that Smith was alleged to have uttered against Mrs. Riehl. If you believe that Levy was retained to commence an action for damages, and that the story that he told you on the stand is true, in reference to the statement he made to the plaintiff about the bond she was required to furnish, and the other incidents of the conversation, then, of course, the defendant is entitled to a verdict, because then there would be no question but that hé was employed to commence civil proceedings, and stated to her that she would be required to furnish a bond of five hundred dollars, and it would cost her one hundred dollars to commence such proceedings. If, however, you believe that he was employed to commence proceedings in a Police Court and that the One Hundred Dollars which he received from this plaintiff was paid to him for such purpose only, your verdict must be in favor of the plaintiff, because the defendant does not even pretend that he attempted to commence proceedings in a police court. On the contrary, he admits that he did not. His sole contention is that he was not employed to go to the Police. Court, but that he was employed to sue this man. If you find for the plaintiff, your verdict must be less that the amount sued for. She sues for $100, but has admitted that Levy had earned compensation to the extent of Ten Dollars, that she was willing to pay him Ten Dollars for his
This charge was excepted to by defendant’s counsel as was also this expression of the court. “ The Court: The plaintiff has testified that she employed Levy to commence the proceedings in the 'Police Court against this man, and she said distinctly that she did not employ him to sue the man Smith. Defendant’s Counsel: I except to that part of your honor’s charge. Does your honor overrule it? The Court: Yes, note an exception to the charge. I cannot overrule the exception.”
A careful examination of the record does not disclose that the plaintiff testified as is stated by the court. Moreover there is not the slightest evidence that the plaintiff suffered through, or by reason of any fraudulent representations or practices on the part of the defendant. The written retainer which upon this trial is conceded to have been signed by the plaintiff, although strenously denied by her upon the former trial, admits of but one reasonable construction, and such construction together with the explicit and positive denial of the defendant that he was employed to begin proceedings in a Police Court, but was so employed to begin an action in the City Court for slander, clegrly outweighs the indefinite and uncertain statement of plaintiff’s husband, before referred to. ¡Neither is it made to appear, even if we assume that the defendant promised to proceed against Smith in the Police Court, that the defendant ever refused to do so, or that plaintiff ever called upon defendant to do so. The following portion of the opinion, given for this court by Mr. Justice Gildersleeve, aptly applies to this appeal.
“ The plaintiff’s contract with the defendant was that the former was to pay the latter $100, in return for which the latter was to prosecute the action against Smith. The plaintiff has paid the $100, and the defendant has already rendered all the services he could in said action, and stood ready and willing to carry out his part of the agreement to the end, but the plaintiff would not let him do so. The plaintiff should not be allowed to profit by such action on her
The testimony given on the part of the plaintiff wholly fails to make out any cause of action against the defendant, and the complaint should have been dismissed upon defendant’s motion made therefor, both at the close of the plaintiff’s case, and again at the close of the whole case.
Judgment reversed. New trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Present: Freedman, P. J., Bischoff and Fitzgerald, JJ.
Judgment reversed. New trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.