14 Adv. S. 11 | Miss. | 1953
Mrs. Beatrice Hudson, the appellant, sued Abe Pevsner, the appellee, and Mrs. W. O. Whigman for damages
Mrs. Hudson’s arrest was caused by Mrs. Whigman. The deciding question is whether Pevsner was liable for the action of Mrs. Whigman. The learned trial judge held he was not.
In January, 1951, Pevsner was the owner and operator of three jewelry stores — one each in Hattiesburg, Laurel and Meridian. He resided in Hattiesburg. The' manager of the Meridian store, called the Diamond Shop, had severed his connection therewith. Mrs. Whigman was temporarily in charge of that shop. Mrs. Hudson owed the shop, but the amount of the indebtedness is not shown. On January 23, 1951, Mrs. Hudson presented to some one in the Shop a check for $35, signed by Roy Horton, payable to cash. Her account was credited with $10 and she was given $25 in cash. On January 27, 1951, Mrs. Hudson got the Shop to cash another check. This one was for $60, was signed by W. T. Horton, the father of Roy Horton, and was payable to Mrs. Hudson, or bearer. Mrs. Hudson endorsed it. Her account was credited with $13 and she was given $47 in cash. Mrs. Hudson was unable to name the employee who had cashed the checks. Mrs. Whigman did not personally know Mrs. Hudson or the Hortons. Both checks were drawn on the Bank of Louisville, Mississippi. Both were dishonored and returned to the Shop. Mrs. Whigman called the Bank over the telephone and was informed the drawers had no account, or funds, at the Bank with which to pay the checks, and also indicated that other bad checks had been drawn on this Bank by these parties. Mrs. Whigman went to see Mrs. Hudson, but no adjustment was made. Mrs. Whigman then went to the sheriff, who directed her to a justice of
Mrs. Whigman, before she took this action, undertook to contact Mr. Pevsner by telephone to know what to do, but was unable to talk with him, he being out of the state. He knew nothing of it until sometime thereafter. He never ratified what she did.
As to her authority, Mrs. Whigman was temporarily in charge of the Shop for about a month. She had the keys with authority to open and close it. She was generally in charge of the sales of merchandise and collections therefor. It is not shown she had power to sell on credit. We will assume she had the authority to receive money in payment of debts owing the Shop by its customers. There is an entire absence of testimony showing she had authority, express or implied, to cash checks and pay out the employer’s money thereon. And, a fortiori, she possessed no authority to have persons arrested and jailed when their checks, so cashed, were turned down by the drawee bank. And even though she had possessed the authority to cash such checks, criminal prosecution of the person receiving the money was not an appropriate means to collect the debt. In Russell v. Palatine Ins. Co., 106 Miss. 290, 63 So. 644, this Court
Affirmed.