169 N.E. 277 | NY | 1929
A customer complained to the defendant that one of its employees, while visiting her apartment to perform a service for the defendant, had stolen a valuable ring therefrom. The plaintiff, who proved to be the employee who had made the visit, was interviewed by two men, Hatch and Donovan, who were employed in the special service department of the defendant. According to the story told by the plaintiff, Hatch laid his hand upon the plaintiff's shoulder stating that a ring had been stolen from the apartment of a customer and saying "come on with us." The plaintiff asked why he should go. Thereupon Hatch said, "You stole one of those rings and you are under arrest." The plaintiff was then taken to a police station by the two men. Hatch told him that he was under arrest and must remain in the station house. He stayed there from ten in the morning until five in the afternoon. At noon he started to go out for lunch but was told by an officer that he could not go since he was "under arrest." At five o'clock the plaintiff was identified by the defendant's customer as the employee who had visited her apartment. He was compelled to remain over night in a station house. Several days *205 later, after a complaint had been filed, the customer appeared in court, stated that she had found the ring, and that no theft had been perpetrated. Accordingly, the complaint against the plaintiff was dismissed.
It is immaterial that Hatch and Donovan, the defendant's servants, employed no physical force against the body of the plaintiff to restrain him. It is enough that, when force sufficient to dominate the situation was displayed, the plaintiff yielded submission and journeyed peaceably, though under compulsion, to the police station. (Stevens v. O'Neill,
"It is not the test of the master's liability for the wrongful act of the servant, from which injury to a third person has resulted, that he expressly authorized the particular act and conduct which occasioned it. In most cases where the master has been held liable for the negligent *206
or tortious act of the servant, the servant acted not only without express authority to do the wrong, but in violation of his duty to the master." (Per ANDREWS, J., in Rounds v. Del.,L. W.R.R. Co.,
The bureau of special service, to which Hatch and Donovan were attached, is a department maintained by the defendant for the purpose of investigating all accident cases and all criminal complaints. We take it that if articles of value are abstracted from some dwelling house or apartment, one of the countless homes served by the defendant with light or power, and a visiting employee of the defendant is accused of the theft, the matter is referred to the bureau of special service for investigation. For what purpose is the investigation conducted? Undoubtedly, so that on the one hand the stolen articles may be recovered and the customer appeased by their return, and upon the other that the thief may be taken and punished, for an example to other employees and for the purification of the defendant's service. It may be inferred that the defendant itself would desire the achievement of these results. It may be inferred that the *207 bureau of investigation was commissioned to achieve them. In the particular instance of this alleged theft, the matter of investigation was referred to Hatch and Donovan. They were ex-policemen. It was their custom to take all accused employees to the complaining customers, so that accuser and accused would meet face to face, and they might "thresh" out the matter. It was their duty to "straighten" out all such matters. The inference lies that Hatch and Donovan were commissioned to perform such acts as might lead to the recovery of the articles stolen and the apprehension and conviction of the detected thief. If, in the course of their activities to accomplish this result, Hatch and Donovan subjected this plaintiff to an arrest, we think it might justly be inferred that they were acting in "the prosecution of the business" of their master with a "view to the furtherance" thereof and not "to accomplish a purpose foreign to it."
The case of Craven v. Bloomingdale (
We think that there was presented for the determination of a jury the question of fact whether the plaintiff was arrested by the servants of the defendant acting within the general scope of their authority, and that the complaint should not have been dismissed.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
POUND, CRANE, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur; CARDOZO, Ch. J., and LEHMAN, J., dissent.
Judgment reversed, etc.