
    P. Clayton Stevens, Resp’t, v. The Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., App’lt.
    
      (New York Common Pleas, General Term,
    
    
      Filed February 6, 1893.)
    
    Malicious prosecution — Probable cause.
    In an action for damages for malicious prosecution, whether defendant had “probable cause” for, or was actuated by “malice” in the criminal prosecution, were questions which depended mainly upon the further question whether or not plaintiff had truthfully testified that, at the time of tendering: his resignation from defendant’s employ, he had admitted having made collections, and demanded to be informed of the amount due him for “reserve salary,” and had offered to pay whatever he owed. Defendant’s superintendent denied the fact of such admission. Held, that it was the province of the jury to determine the conflict of evidence.
    Appeal from a judgment for plaintiff entered upon a verdict in his favor, and from an order denying defendant's motion for a new trial, made on the minutes.
    Action for damages for plaintiff’s malicious prosecution upon a charge of larceny.
    
      Edward F. O'Dwyer, for resp’t; Arnoux, Ritch & Woodford (C. N. Bovee, Jr., of counsel), for app’lt.
   Bischoff, J.

Plaintiff had been in defendant’s employ as a solicitor of insurance and collecting agent for a period of about two years immediately preceding May 10, 1889. On that day he resigned from the employment, and on the 21st day of the same month he was apprehended on a criminal charge preferred against him by defendant. The charge was larceny, and involved the alleged felonious misappropriation of $1.40 which had been ¡>aid him for defendant by one of its policy-holders. Upon this charge plaintiff was indicted by the grand jury, and subsequently tried and acquitted. Thereafter he brought this action to recover damages for his alleged malicious prosecution. The jury awarded him $2,000, and from the judgment which was entered on the verdict, and the order which refused it a new trial on the minutes, defendant appealed.

Whether defendant had “ probable cause ” for, or was actuated by “ malice ” in the criminal prosecution, were questions which, in the present case, depended mainly upon the further question whether or not plaintiff had truthfully testified that, at the time of tendering his resignation from defendant’s employ, he had admitted having made collections and demanded to be informed of the amount due him for “ reserve salary,” and had offered to pay whatever he should be found to be owing defendant for money collected for it Williams, defendant’s superintendent, denied the fact of such an admission, demand and offer, and testified that plaintiff denied having made any collections, but it was the province of the jury to determine this conflict of evidence as well as the degree of credibility to which the witnesses, both .being interested in the result of this action, were respectively entitled. The motions for dismissal of the complaint and for the direction of a verdict for defendant were, therefore, justly .denied.

In Willard v. Holmes, Booth & Haydens, opinion handed down herewith, we stated the legal principles which should control on the trial of an action for malicious prosecution, and careful consideration of the several exceptions to the rulings has resulted in our conclusion that these principles were not departed from on the trial of this.

The learned trial jfidge correctly ruled out evidence tending to show that at or about the time defendant caused plaintiff’s arrest he was guilty of an attempted fraud upon defendant utterly disconnected with the alleged crime of which he was accused. Plaintiff was not called upon, either in this action or in the criminal prosecution, to defend an accusation of such attempted fraud. It was for that reason irrelevant and incompetent; and in so far as appellant’s counsel urges that the evidence excluded was admissible because less convincing evidence is required to establish “ probable cause ” for the prosecution of a person suspected of crime if he is known to be of ill-repute, he trespasses upon the rale which forbids proof of ill-repute by evidence of specific acts.

Defendant’s counsel requested the court to charge that the facts that the police magistrate entertained the complaint in the criminal prosecution and issued a warrant for plaintiff’s apprehension, that plaintiff waived a preliminary examination in the police court, that he was subsequently indicted by the grand jury, that on trial of the indictment the question of plaintiff’s guilt was submitted to a jury, and that the jury deliberated for some time before arrriving at a verdict of plaintiff’s acquittal, constituted con- elusive evidence of “ probable cause ” for plaintiff’s prosecution ; and to the refusal so to charge exception was taken. As the matters mentioned, however, at most were prima facie evidence of “ probable cause,” Newell on Malicious Prosecution, etc., chap. VII, § 19, subd. 11, p. 290, the request was properly refused and the exception is without force.

The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.

Bookstaver, and Pryor, JJ., concur.  