188 S.E. 817 | N.C. | 1936
Civil action for false imprisonment or false arrest.
The corporate defendant is engaged in the manufacture of rugs, mats, bedspreads, etc., and employs a number of women, 40 or 50, to operate *9 its sewing machines. The night shift works from 5:15 p.m. to 1:45 a.m., with half an hour for lunch from 9:30 to 10:00 o'clock. The plaintiff was so working on the night of 8 February, 1936, when Miss Elaine Tucker, "Assistant Superintendent in Charge of the Girls' Room," or "Instructor" to see that right colors are used, announced that two of the girls had lost their weekly wages, which had been paid to them that night, and suggested that a search be made to see if the money could be found. This was done. They went through each spread which had been made that night.
Plaintiff testifies: "Miss Tucker said that she had talked with Mrs. Fuller over the phone and that Mrs. Fuller had given her instructions to fasten the doors and search everyone. (Objection and motion to strike; overruled; exception.) . . . I said, `Well, she can't do that.'. . . I told Miss Tucker that I did not want to be searched and that I did not have the money and knew nothing about it. . . . Then I said, `Well, if it has to be done and I can't go home, come on and let's get through with it, so that I can go home.' . . . It was after 2 o'clock and we went over into another room where Miss Tucker searched me. . . . Miss Tucker said she had called two policemen."
Cross-examination: "We were all wanting the girls to get their money. We were all willing to cooperate. I wanted to be free from suspicion, but I was not willing to be searched."
Miss Tucker's testimony is somewhat different: "All the employees in the room unanimously asked to be searched. No one objected to being searched. Mrs. Parrish asked to be searched. . . . I did not touch her; she asked me the second time to search her. . . . I did not have authority to search them. . . . I was not carrying out Mrs. Fuller's instructions."
Mrs. L. B. Fuller is secretary and treasurer and local manager of the corporate defendant. She was at home on the night in question, confined to her bed with the "Flu." She knew nothing of the occurrence until it was all over. Miss Tucker never talked with her until after the search had been made, and no authority was given to Miss Tucker to make the search. "The Boysell Company had no interest in this money. . . . It did not belong to the Boysell Company, but to the girls. . . . Neither was it of any benefit to Elaine or myself whether they found it." No money was ever found.
At the close of all the evidence, the motion for judgment of nonsuit was allowed as to Mrs. L. B. Fuller, and overruled as to the other defendants.
The jury, in response to issues submitted, found that the plaintiff had been "unlawfully arrested and falsely imprisoned" by the defendants, Elaine Tucker and the Boysell Company, and awarded compensatory damages in the sum of $116.00. *10
Judgment for plaintiff, from which the defendants appeal, assigning errors. Two questions are presented by the appeal of the corporate defendant.
1. Was Elaine Tucker acting within the course of her employment or the scope of her authority as an employee of the defendant company in searching the plaintiff? The answer is, "No." Lamm v. Charles Stores Co.,
2. Was Miss Tucker specifically authorized to make the search in question? The answer is, "No."
We had occasion to examine anew the meaning of the expression "course of employment," or "scope of authority," as applied to variant fact situations, in the recent cases of Robertson v. Power Co.,
"A servant is acting in the course of his employment when he is engaged in that which he was employed to do, and is at the time about his master's business. He is not acting in the course of his employment if he is engaged in some pursuit of his own. Not every deviation from the strict execution of his duty is such an interpretation of the course of employment as to suspend the master's responsibility; but, if there is a total departure from the course of the master's business, the master is no longer answerable for the servant's conduct." Tiffany on Agency, p. 270.
It is elementary that the master is responsible for the tort of his servant which results in injury to another when the servant is acting by authority or within the scope of his employment and about the master's business. Roberts v. R. R.,
On the other hand, it is equally well established that the master is not liable if the tort of the servant which caused the injury occurred while the servant was engaged in some private matter of his own, or outside the legitimate scope of his employment, and without specific authority from the master. Bucken v. R. R., supra. As illustrative of this position, the following cases are apposite: Ellis v. Trust Co.,
Coming, then, to the record before us, it is a rule of universal acceptance that extrajudicial declarations of an alleged agent are inadmissible to establish either the fact of agency or its nature and extent, such statements being regarded as hearsay and offered for the purpose of proving the truth of the factual matter therein asserted. S. v.Lassiter,
Conversely, proof of agency, as well as of its nature and extent, may be made by the direct testimony of the alleged agent. Therefore, the testimony of Miss Tucker was competent. Jones v. Light Co.,
Viewed in the light of the above principles, it appears that the record is barren of any authorization or ratification on the part of the Boysell Company of plaintiff's alleged arrest and imprisonment. Dickerson v.Refining Co., supra. It is the holding in Md. Cas. Co. v. Woolley,
It follows, therefore, from what is said above, the demurrer to the evidence interposed by the corporate defendant should have been allowed.
The case against Elaine Tucker stands on a different footing. She assumed responsibility for the search, and while the plaintiff, on cross-examination, very nearly testifies to a voluntary search, which would have rendered it harmless on the principle of volenti non fit injuria,Riley v. Stone, supra, still, taken as a whole, the evidence on the point is sufficiently equivocal to require its submission to the jury. It is unfortunate, perhaps, that the corporate defendant was allowed to remain in the case, nevertheless, as presently presented, this cannot avail the individual defendant. As to her, the demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled. Riley v. Stone, supra.
"False imprisonment is the illegal restraint of the person of any one against his will" — Ashe, J., in S. v. Lunsford,
The result, then, is an affirmance in part and a reversal in part of the judgment below. The costs of the appeal will be divided between the plaintiff and the individual defendant.
On appeal of the Boysell company, Reversed.
On appeal of Elaine Tucker, No error.