This is an action for damages for invasion of privacy. Plaintiff received a verdict in a total amount of $2,500, and defendant appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals which Court adopted an opinion affirming the judgment. We ordered the case transferred to this Court and it will be determined here the same as on *397 original appeal. Art. V, § 10, Const.Mo. 1945, V.A.M.S.
Plaintiff, the wife of David Zimmerman, was an employee of the American Hereford Association. In 1962, David Zimmerman purchased a new car. The car was financed by defendant. Plaintiff did not sign the note. Plaintiff testified that beginning in May, 1963, she began to receive telephone calls from employees of defendant; that the first calls were requests for plaintiff to find out from her husband when he would send in a payment but later the callers tried to coerce plaintiff into making payments; that the calls continued through June and July, 1963, becoming more frequent until the defendant’s employees were calling plaintiff daily at her work and threatening to contact her employer, or garnishee her wages; that, as a result of the calls, she became very upset and could not do her work; and that the calls stopped coming after the car was repossessed by defendant in the latter part of 1963.
Defendant first contends that the trial court erred in overruling its objections to evidence “regarding incoming phone calls, allegedly from employees of the defendant, from an unidentified number, when there was no identification or other means to render competent such hearsay evidence.” We do not agree.
The applicable general rule was stated in State ex rel. Strohfeld v. Cox et al.,
Plaintiff recognizes the general rule but states her position as follows: “In the instant case, the plaintiff testified that she received many telephone calls from people who identified themselves as being employees of the defendant, Associates Discount Corporation. In Answers to Interrogatories, the defendant admitted that it had in its employ people with the names used by the callers on the telephone. The conversations between the plaintiff and the callers from the defendant’s office all dealt with a note signed by the plaintiff’s husband, and delinquent payments due on said note. It is very unlikely, in fact, almost improbable that anyone other than the defendant, the plaintiff and her husband would know about the existence of said note, and especially the fact that payments on it were delinquent. Certainly it would seem that the subject matter of the calls * * * would adequately identify the caller so as to make the conversations admissible. * *
We agree with plaintiff that an exception to the general rule should be made when sufficient circumstantial evidence is introduced to show the identity of the caller. This view is supported in Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd Edition, Vol. VII, § 2155. See also 29 Am.Jur.2d, Evidence, § 383 and 31A C.J.S. Evidence § 188. We consider the circumstantial evidence sufficient for this purpose in this case. Cf. Kansas City Star Pub. Co. v. Standard Warehouse Co.,
Defendant next contends that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case under the theory of invasion of privacy. We agree.
*398
In Biederman’s of Springfield, Inc. v. Wright, Mo.Sup.,
There is no evidence in this record to show that any person, other than plaintiff, heard what was said to plaintiff. The element of “publicity” is not supported by evidence. Therefore, the judgment for plaintiff, based upon a cause of action for invasion of privacy, cannot stand.
In this posture, what disposition should be made of the case ? It is apparent that plaintiff proceeded upon an erroneous theory of liability on the part of defendant. However, under the circumstances, we cannot conclude that this was “done for strategic advantage.” See Smith v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
The record shows a state of facts which justifies a remand to permit plaintiff to seek recovery under some other theory of liability, if so advised. For example, see 1 Restatement, Law of Torts, Second, § 46; Pretsky v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, Mo.Sup.,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
