188 Mo. App. 278 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This suit was on a petition in two counts, the first of which asked actual and punitive damages for false imprisonment, the second sought similar damages for malicious prosecution.
The suit grew out of the following facts: Plaintiff, Milton, and two others named Brown and Sebastian were employed at a barn maintained by defendant, the Missouri Dairy Company. At this barn the horses of both defendants were kept pursuant to an arrangement whereby the expense of feed for the horses was prorated between them in accordance with the number of horses maintained by each.
Some one reported to Chapman, the manager of the Dairy Company, that feed was being stolen from the barn and sold. It was the duty of Milton, Brown and Sebastian every morning to load the barn refuse and manure into a wagon, which Sebastian would then haul to the city dump. Having learned that feed was being taken from the barn by being concealed in the wagon under the manure, those in charge of the business began to observe things a little more closely. On the evening of June 26, 1912, Curnett, the foreman at the barn, noticed that the manure wagon, standing in an enclosed passageway south of and adjoining the barn, was covered with- horse blankets. Upon investigating, he found five sacks of oats under them. He reported it to Howard the man in charge of the first floor of the barn. They say they examined the oats and found them to be of good quality. When they reported this to Chapman, he directed them to watch the oats and see what became of them. They remained at the barn that night. About seven o’clock the next morning, Brown got up into the wagon, tied the sacks which were open and put them under the seat in the front end of the wagon. Milton and Brown then pitched manure into the wagon while Sebastian was on the wagon loading it. When the wagon was loaded the sacks were completely covered by the manure.
From the time Milton, Brown, and Sebastian began loading the wagon, Chapman, Curnett and Howard had been watching them, and when the wagon left, they secretly followed it. Instead of driving directly to the dump, Sebastian drove around a block or two until he was joined by Brown and then they went to the dump stopping on the way at a saloon. When the manure was unloaded at the dump the wagon was driven to the residence of a teamster by the name of Keller at Fourth and Gillis streets .where they sold the oats, ten bushels, for four dollars, telling him that they were teamsters but had sold their horses and no longer had use for the feed. Keller examined "the oats and found them of good quality. Keller had a five dollar bill but no change, and to make the .change Proudfoot gave Keller a dollar and took the bill with the understanding that he would get the change and give Sebastian the four dollars on. the way back.
Thereupon this suit was instituted. After a trial of the issues, the jury found a verdict for plaintiff on the first count for $1000 actual and one dollar punitive
Plaintiff admits that he knew the sacies were in the wagon; that he helped sack the oats; hut at the justice trial and the trial of this case he contended that the oats were spoiled oats and that Asbury a former foreman, who had left the bam about two weeks before they were sold, had authorized them to sell the oats for whatever they could get, and the claim of all three men was that they were merely obeying these orders. And yet no claim of this kind was made at the time of the arrest, nor, as stated, did he ask why he was being detained or arrested or offer any explanation to clear himself of any appearance of guilt. Milton admits that Sebastian gave him the four dollars obtained for the oats, but says it was given to him just before they started upstairs at the Dairy office to get the money due them for their wages after they had given bond, had been released and had gone to the barn and changed their clothes. When Chapman asked about the money for the oats, Milton gave it to him. Keller who bought the oats, and every man who examined them, swore they were good oats and not damp, rotten or sprouted' as the men claimed they were. Prondfoot swore that he came to the barn shortly after Chapman reached there with the men from the place where the oats were sold, and that Milton said to .him, “Well, Chapman got ns.” He also swore that at a meeting of the men a few days before the justice trial, Milton said it would be necessary for them to swear they had authority to sell the oats and wanted Prondfoot to testify to that effect which he declined to do. This testimony of Prondfoot’s can have no force here since all of his testimony as well as many other suspicious and incriminating circumstances not mentioned herein are denied by Milton. But the facts which he does admit, the explanation he gives of their right to sell the oats, the failure to ask why he was
It is urged that there is no evidence tending to connect the Ice Cream Company with the arrest. After a careful examination of the record we are unable to concur in this view. Under the arrangement between the two defendants, both were interested in the amount of feed used at the stable, and were therefore interested in stopping any stealing thereof. Jorgensen, an employee of the Ice Cream Company, but not of the Dairy Company, swore to the complaint which instituted the prosecution after the arrest had been made, and this affidavit placed the ownership of the oats in both companies. So that both defendants had a motive or reason for participating in the arrest. ■ The president of the lee Cream Company directed Jorgensen to have the men arrested. It is claimed now that the president merely communicated a request from the manager of the Dairy Company to Jorgensen to do that, but Jorgensen was not under the orders of the Dairy Company nor of any officer thereof. And there was evidence tending to show that the president of the Ice Cream Company himself directed Jorgensen to procure the
Error is claimed because the court admitted evidence of the plaintiff’s good reputation. The general rule is that in civil cases the character of plaintiff is not admissible. But where it is put in issue by the pleadings it is relevant. False imprisonment is a wrongful interference with one’s personal liberty. It does not necessarily include injury to the character or
But if plaintiff is entitled to show his good reputation by reason of the fact that he has alleged an injury thereto, then he must not only prove his reputation at the time of the arrest but also submit evidence from which it can be inferred that his reputation at ¡that time suffered injury. By his petition he has alleged that his reputation was injured by the arrest. How can the jury determine that injury if there is no evidence as to what that reputation was ? If the arrest produced, any injury to his reputation it was to his .’reputation at the present time and not to a reputation borne in former years. Not only was no injury to his
Error is claimed on account of the refusal of the court to give defendants’ instruction number 22 which in effect informed the jury that they were not concluded on the question of plaintiff’s guilt of stealing the oats by the result of the case in the justice court, inasmuch as plaintiff’s instruction number 5 was likely to make the jury think they were. It is not necessary to pass on this because, upon a new trial, the occasion for this instruction will not arise. The jury found for defendants on the malicious prosecution count and the new trial can only be had upon the other. Indeed, as both counts arose out of the same transaction, the finding in plaintiff’s favor could result in a judgment upon only one of them. [Boeger v. Langenherg, 97 Mo. 390.]
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.