171 N.Y. 439 | NY | 1902
We are of opinion that the learned trial judge failed to instruct the jury properly as to the law of punitive or vindictive damages.
A brief statement of the facts is necessary in order to present the legal question involved. The defendant is the proprietor of a department store in the city of New York, under the firm name of Bloomingdale Brothers. In the conduct of the business a large number of wagons, owned by defendant, are used in delivering goods purchased. The driver of the wagon involved in this action to recover damages for false imprisonment was employed under a written contract which authorized the defendant to charge him and deduct from his wages any money, or the value of any merchandise, which might be lost, damaged, destroyed or stolen after being placed in his charge. The driver also gave a bond with surety under this contract.
The plaintiff purchased an article which, on delivery, proved *442 unsatisfactory. It was returned and another sent in exchange. Full payment had been made on the original purchase, and on the second article a small balance was due defendant. An error was made in defendant's store by which the driver was required to collect the full price of the article and not the balance actually due. The driver, on delivering the second article, insisted on full payment, or a return of the property. An altercation ensued between the plaintiff and the driver, and as the latter was denied full payment, or the return of the property, he sent out for a policeman and the result was that plaintiff was arrested, taken to the police station and on a statement of the facts at once discharged. The matter being brought to defendant's attention, he said he "was sorry that such a thing had happened" and asked what he could do. The plaintiff demanded the return of his money and stated he desired to have no further business with the firm. This action was then commenced and the jury rendered a verdict for $1,250. The Appellate Division affirmed the judgment entered upon this verdict.
We have here presented the question as to the proper measure of damages in the case of a merchant whose servant, in the delivery of goods, causes the illegal arrest of a customer. The fact that the master was not present when the arrest was made does not necessarily absolve him from liability. If, on the evidence, the jury could find that the master authorized the arrest, or subsequently ratified it, he must respond in damages. In the case before us, it is not claimed the master directly authorized the arrest of the plaintiff, or ratified it when brought to his attention. It was, however, a question for the jury to determine, if the evidence warranted it, whether the manner in which the defendant conducted his business, through the intervention of the driver, constituted such a system as to render the act of the driver the act of the master.
After the trial judge had completed his main charge, he took up the plaintiff's requests, and said: "I do not think I made it very clear to the jury — the distinction between compensatory and punitive damages; it is as follows: Damages in an *443 action for false imprisonment, for humiliation, insult and wounded sensibilities are regarded in law as compensatory damages. If you find for the plaintiff, when you have reached some sum — made up your mind, some sum that you think is reasonable and right in the way of compensatory damages, then you have the power, if you think proper, to add to that some sum by way of punitive or vindictive damages. But your verdict will be an aggregate sum."
At the close of the charge the defendant's counsel excepted to that portion of it in which the court said that it was within the province of the jury to give punitive or vindictive damages; also, where the court said that the jury have the right to add a sum for punitive damages.
The defendant's fifth request to charge reads: "That if the jury finds in favor of the plaintiff, they may not award punitive damages." The court refused to so charge and an exception was taken.
The learned Appellate Division placed its affirmance of the judgment of the Trial Term upon the rule laid down in Lynch v.Metropolitan El. Ry. Co. (
We are unable to see the similarity between these two cases. The gatekeeper in the case cited rested under the duty to collect a ticket before a passenger was allowed to pass out. The passenger claimed that he had lost his ticket, and the gatekeeper assumed it to be his duty to detain him and prosecute him under the circumstances. The case at bar presents a very different situation. The driver's remark, "I have got to have the stove or the money, because I am responsible for it," should be considered by the jury in determining whether the driver acted for the defendant or himself. If the jury are to pass upon the question whether a system existed in defendant's business authorizing this arrest, they must also consider *445 the circumstances under which the driver was employed. He was required to give security on entering his employment and was personally liable to his employer for the goods intrusted to his care or the money called for by his list. Undoubtedly, in the case supposed by the Appellate Division of an article taken from the wagon by a thief while passing along the street, the driver, whether acting in his own behalf or that of his master, would be justified in pursuing the thief and causing his arrest.
We are of the opinion that the jury retired without an accurate conception of the rule of damages in actions for false imprisonment. It is undoubtedly the rule that the master is liable in compensatory damages if his manner of conducting business justified the jury in believing that the servant was acting within the scope of his employment and discharging the ordinary duties imposed upon him.
The case at bar is clearly distinguishable from the recent case of Stevens v. O'Neill (
The above case, and other cases of like character, involving the conduct of retail stores, disclose a detective system which authorized officers and others in the employ of merchants, to subject customers suspected of theft to personal search and other indignities. A system was thus established *446 which made the acts of those effecting the arrest clearly those of the master. The case at bar is distinguishable from this line of authorities.
In Voltz v. Blackmar (
In Cleghorn v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co. (
In Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. v. Prentice (
The learned judge states in this connection that the law applicable to this case has been found nowhere better stated than in Hagan v. Providence Worcester Railroad Co. (
It is to be observed that neither in Mott v. Consumers' IceCo. (
In Mott v. Consumers' Ice Co. (supra) the question was whether the driver of defendant's ice wagon ran into plaintiff's carriage maliciously or intentionally, or whether the collision was due to negligent and reckless driving on the part of defendant's servant.
Judge ALLEN, in writing for the court in this case, after alluding to the liability of the master for the acts of his servant, within the scope of his employment, said: "But if the servant goes outside of his employment, and without regard to his service, acting maliciously, or in order to effect some purpose of his own, wantonly commits a trespass, or causes damage to another, the master is not responsible, so that the inquiry is whether the wrongful act is in the course of the employment or outside of it, and to accomplish a purpose foreign to it. In the latter case the relation of master and servant does not exist so as to hold the master for the act. (Croft v. Alison, 4 B.
Ald. 590; Wright v. Wilcox, 19 Wend. 343; Vanderbilt v.Richmond Turnpike Co.,
The learned judge, after discussing the evidence in detail, said: "The whole evidence of the witness only tended to show gross carelessness on the part of the driver of the ice cart, and that was the most that the witness intended by the answer to either question. When the evidence is that the wrongful act was not within the general scope of the servant's employment, and so not within the express or implied authorization of the master, it is for the court to pass upon the competency of the evidence and for the jury to give effect to it." *450
It thus appears that this last case dealt only with the ordinary situation of the reckless driving of defendant's servant.
It is apparent that when the trial judge, in the case before us, having instructed the jury as to the law of compensatory damages, told them in effect that they had also the power, if they thought proper, to add to such sum, as they fixed for compensation, an amount for punitive or vindictive damages, the jury were furnished no rule under which these latter damages could be assessed; they were simply told that they had the power to award them.
We do not wish to be understood as expressing any opinion as to the merits of this case, or as laying down a rule as to its particular facts that will embarrass the court below on a second trial.
It will be for the jury to determine, upon the facts submitted for their consideration, whether the driver was acting within the general scope of his employment when he caused the arrest of the plaintiff, or was proceeding outside of that relation and to accomplish a purpose foreign to it.
If the jury find against the defendant, they will be at liberty to assess such reasonable compensatory damages to which the plaintiff is entitled by reason of the indignity of the arrest and the humiliation incident thereto.
Punitive or vindictive damages can be added to compensatory damages only when the case is brought within the rule so clearly laid down in the authorities we have discussed. This is a question for the jury to decide, if there is evidence for their consideration, under proper instructions by the trial judge.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, MARTIN and VANN, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc. *451