Court Opinion

ID: 5455584
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:17:58.790647+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:38.194890
License: Public Domain

Davies, J.
—The motion in this case has been most elaborately and ably argued, and the magnitude of the amount involved, and the very general attention which the case has attracted, have led me to a more careful consideration of the case, and a more critical examination of the numerous authorities cited, than is usual in motions of this character.
A motion has heretofore been made in this cause for the discharge of the defendant Felicité Dubud, on the ground that she being a female, could not be arrested for the matters complained of. This court held on argument that the facts showed that the acts complained of were a wilful injury to property, and such as authorized the arrest of a female under subdivision 5 of section 179 of the Code.
It is now contended, on the behalf of the defendants making this motion, that the plaintiffs have sustained no damage by their acts, and .that, therefore, no cause of action exists against them. This argument concedes the truth of the allegations of the complaint.
Subdivision 1 of section 179 of the Code, declares that the defendant may be arrested in an action for the recovery of damages for wrongfully taking, detaining, or converting property. Subdivision 2 of the same section authorizes the arrest of a party in an action for property embezzled or fraudulently misapplied by any officer or agent of a corporation, in the course of his employment as such, or by any agent or other person acting in a fiduciary capacity.
By their argument the defendants admit the taking, detention, and conversion, as alleged in the complaint; and the defendant, Louis Grelet, admits that while acting in this fiduciary capacity, he took and converted to his own use the shares of the stock of the plaintiffs, with the coupons attached, and sold and disposed of the same, and received the proceeds thereof. The plaintiffs allege that these shares of stock thus taken belonged to them, or were deposited with them for safe keeping. If the shares belonged to the plaintiffs—if they were the plaintiffs’ property, as they allege—I am unable to see why the taking, detention, and conversion, and the embezzlement and sale thereof, are not an injury to the plaintiffs. Certainly, it seems to me. that the unfaithful agent cannot be permitted to say, after he has realized the fruits of his delinquency—“It is true, I have taken and *51disposed of the shares of stock of the plaintiffs, and have realized the proceeds thereof, hut I did it under such circumstances, that no legal liability can be created or claim made against me for the property thus taken.” I cannot recognize such a position as sound in morals, or as sustained by any principle of law. The plaintiffs have been deprived, by the fraudulent act of the defendants, of what they claim to be their property, and the defendants cannot be excused, on the ground that their fraudulent acts have conferred no title upon the present owners and holders of these shares, and that, therefore, the plaintiffs are not damnified.
The plaintiffs further say, that these shares were owned by them, or were deposited with them for safe keeping. Does it follow, because thus deposited, that the plaintiffs have sustained no injury by the abstraction and embezzlement of them by the defendants ? The plaintiffs allege that they have sustained such injury, and no fact is shown by the defendants which controverts this position. I am, therefore, justified in the conclusion in reference to this branch of the subject, that, as to such shares of stock as were deposited with the plaintiffs, and taken and disposed of by the defendants, they were deposited with the plaintiffs on such terms and conditions as would make them responsible to the owners thereof for the value of the same, especially when such loss had been occasioned by the acts of the employees of the plaintiffs. It is sufficient, for the purpose of this motion, to say that the plaintiffs have made all the shares and coupons taken and converted, their property, and claim the same as such; and it is not competent for the defendants, in my judgment, as already intimated, to exculpate themselves, by assuming the ground that their acts are of so grave a character that the title to these shares has never been changed.
The second cause of action is that authorized by section 206 of the Code, being an action to recover the possession of personal property. There is no doubt that this is a substitute for the relief heretofore obtained in an action of replevin. (Roberts v. Randal, 3 Sandf., 707; Chappel v. Skinner, 6 How. Pr. R., 339.) In such an action the defendant may be arrested when he has been guilty of a fraud in concealing or disposing of the property, for the taking, detention, or conversion of which the action is brought. (Code, § 179, subd. 4.) To maintain this ac*52tion, it is not essential that the plaintiffs should he the owners of the property taken, detained and converted. A bailee, trustee, or any other person who is responsible to his principal, may maintain the action, and the lawful possession of the goods is prima fade ^evidence of property. (Edwards on Bailments, 56 ; Fantherce v. Brown, 13 Wend., 63; 2 Burr. Pr., 2; 3 Hill, 348.) The plaintiffs, therefore, being in possession of these shares, whether as owners or as bailees, can maintain this action to recover the property taken, detained, and converted, and, so far as the defendants are concerned, are to be treated as owners thereof.
Are the facts, upon which the order of arrest was issued, sufficiently established to authorize its detention ? In my judgment they are in reference to all of the defendants but Eugene Grelet and Felicité Dubud.
[The Court here proceeded to discuss, at length, the evidence adduced in the case against the several defendants, and to show that there was not sufficient against Eugene Grelet and Dubud, while there was against the others. We omit this portion of the opinion.]
The motion, therefore, to discharge the defendants Eugene Grelet and Felicité Dubud from arrest in this cause is granted, on their stipulating not to commence any action for unlawful imprisonment; and the motion as to the other defendants is denied.
Dpon the settlement of the order, a further question was raised as to the propriety of the condition imposed upon the discharge granted; upon which question a further argument was heard.
John Townshend, for the defendants discharged, contended that the application to vacate the order, was ex débito justifies, and the condition suggested could not, therefore, be imposed. He cited Cash a. Walls, 1 Barnw. & Ad., 375; Abbott v. Greenwood, 7 Dowl. Pr. C., 534; Adlam v. Noble, 9 Ib., 322; Pearce v. Chaflin, 9 Q. B. R., 802; Giraud v. Austin, 1 Dowl., N. S., 703; Bank of U. S. v. Jenkins, 18 Johns., 309.
Davies, J.
—The attention of the Court having been called to the condition upon which the order to discharge the defendants *53Eugene Grelet and Felicité Dubud was granted, I have looked again into the practice in similar cases.
The rule, governing the courts in England, is thus laid down. (1 Arch. Pr., by Chitty, 703.) “ Generally speaking, if the application (to discharge from arrest) is successful, the judge either orders the payment of the costs by the plaintiff, and restrains the defendant from bringing any action on account of the arrest upon an improper affidavit, or else leaves the defendant to bring such action without making any order as to costs.” The practice in the courts of this State is quite universal, to impose such a stipulation when it appears that the arrest was ■without malice and upon probable cause. No malice is alleged in this case; and that it was on probable cause, is manifest from the fact that it was made by the order of a judge of this court, upon being satisfied that sufficient grounds existed to authorize it.
The case of the Bank of United States v. Jenkins (18 Johns., 305), cited by defendant’s counsel, sustains this practice.
In that case, the attorney for the plaintiffs issued a ca. sa. against the defendant, and caused him to be arrested and imprisoned, when absent from home, in a distant county of the State, without having previously issued a fi. fa. against his property, as required by statute.
The court, in setting aside the ca. sa. and directing the defendant to be discharged from imprisonment, say:—“ As the attorney of the plaintiffs would be liable to an action for false imprisonment, and as there might be some doubt as to the meaning of the act, and he may have acted in good faith, we think we have a right to impose terms on the defendant. We therefore grant the motion on condition that he stipulates not to bring an action for false imprisonment.” The attention of the court was in that case again called to this condition, when Spencer, chief justice, says:—“ We have again looked into the affidavits on which the motion was made, on the first day of the term, and on reconsidering the law, we are satisfied that there was nothing to warrant the practice pursued by the attorney for the plaintiffs; and that it was merely an experiment, on their part, to get their money, supposing, probably, that if the defendant was taken in execution, at so great a distance from home, he would find some means to satisfy the debt.” The court there*54fore directed the original rule to he amended by striking out the condition.
In this case, therefore, there was no intimation of any want of power in the court to impose such a condition, but on the contrary, an express affirmation and exercise of it, and which was only waived because the court was satisfied that the arrest of the defendant was procured by malicious motives and for unjustifiable purposes.
In the other case referred to, The Merchants’ Bank of New-Haven a. Henry Dwight, Jun., in the Superior Court, the defendant was arrested on August 9,1856, by virtue of an order made by one of the judges of that court, and imprisoned thereon.
On an appeal from said order, the case was heard before all the six judges of the Superior Court, who, on December 11, 1856, decided that the said order of arrest should be “ vacated, and the defendant discharged from arrest thereunder. This order is made upon the condition that the said defendant shall within ten days from the date thereof stipulate not to bring any action for false imprisonment, or for damages, by reason of his said arrest, and deliver such stipulation to the plaintiffs’ attorney in this action.”
It was upon the authority of this and other cases, and the uniform practice of the courts in this State and in England, that I made the order I did, in vacating the order of arrest in this case as to the defendants Eugene Grelet and Felicitó Dubud. I do not think I can greatly err in following such precedents. Being satisfied that there was no malice in causing the arrest of the defendants whose discharge I have directed, and that there was probable cause for the same, the proper form of the order to be entered, is like, in all respects, to the order of the Superior Corn’t in the case of The Merchants’ Bank of Hew-Haven a. Henry Dwight, Jun.