71 Mo. App. 341 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
Lead Opinion
This is an action for an illegal arrest and false imprisonment alleged to have been committed against the plaintiff by defendant’s employees -in charge of one floor of their large department store at Kansas City. Plaintiff’s evidence was to the effect that in the afternoon of April 29, 1892, she visited defendants’ store, and while there, waiting to meet a lady friend, she was arrested by the floorwalker, taken against her will into the superintendent’s office, and there detained on the charge of stealing a piece of lace; that she was forced to take off her coat and turn the pockets wrong side out; that no such article was discovered, but that the lace was then found on the counter from which they falsely accused her of'taking it. Among other witnesses, the defendants introduced a young lady clerk who attended the lace counter, and who testified that she saw the plaintiff take the piece of lace from the stock and conceal it in her pocket; that the witness went at once to the floorwalker, a short distance away, and reported the theft and that said floorwalker at once took the plaintiff to the superintendent’s office, where after an investigation and search the plaintiff was allowed to go. The jury found as a fact that plaintiff did not take the lace, that she was falsely accused, that she was arrested and detained against her will, and awarded her damages in' the sum of $500, and from a judgment in accordance therewith defendants appealed.
I. The main question raised on this appeal is— adnfitting the plaintiff to have been wrongfully used and to have been falsely charged, illegally detained and searched — whether or not defendants are responsible for the damages, it being conceded that they were not present and did not specifically order the arrest, and more than this that the employees were under instruc
These principles are applicable to the case at bar. These servants or agents of the defendants were put in charge of goods held for sale; their primary duty of course was to make sales, but they were likewise relied
Neither will this liability be shifted and defendants relieved, because, as testified by defendant Thayer, he cautioned his employees to make no arrests except in cases where they actually saw the theft committed. Innocent third parties can not be affected by these instructions which were disobeyed by the defendants’ servants. Carretzen v. Duenckel, 50 Mo. 104; Farber v. Railway, 32 Mo. App. 378; Jones v. Packet Co., 43 Mo. App. 398. In these and numerous other cases that might be cited, it is in effect held that the master will be liable where the act was 'done by the servant in the scope of his employment, and to accomplish the purpose of that employment,, although it was done contrary to the express orders of the master. “The test of a master’s responsibility for the act of his servant is, whether the act was done in the prosecution of the master’s business, not whether it was done in accordance with the instructions' of the master to the servant.” Cosgrove v. Ogden, 49 N. Y. 255; Rounds v. Railroad, 64 N. Y. 129; Mfg. Co. v. Boyce, 36 Kan. 350.
It must be conceded that the case just cited is authority for defendants’ contention. But it seems to us that the New York , court in the case referred to misapplied the principle stated in the foregoing quotation. When it is said that no authority will be implied in the agent to do an act in defense of the principal’s property, which act the principal himself could not lawfully do if present, it must be understood as having relation rather to the character of the act than as to what the principal might have lawfully done under the particular circumstances of the case. To illustrate: The master would have no authority, if present, to shoot and kill one detected in stealing his goods, and so under the rule, correctly applied, no such authority could be implied in the servant. But the master may lawfully arrest and detain the thief and thereby force him to give up the stolen goods, and authority therefor may be impliedly given to the servant or agent, standing in place of the principal. In a well considered case from Rhode Island, Mali v. Lord was thus criticised: “Neither does this principle forbid the court to imply the responsibility of the master for the wrongful or
Other points mentioned in brief — relating to the court’s modification of instructions, and the argument of plaintiff’s counsel to the jury — we have considered! and find in none of them any substantial matter for; complaint. The case was fairly tried and submitted) to the jury on proper instructions. The judgment will therefore be affirmed. All concur.
Rehearing
ON MOTION NOR REHEARING.
Counsel urges that the court fails to give effect to his contention that there can not be implied authority given to an agent to do an act which the principal could not lawfully do if present. His