A. Harris & Co. v. Caldwell

276 S.W. 298, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 806
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1925
DocketNo. 9391.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 298 (A. Harris & Co. v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Harris & Co. v. Caldwell, 276 S.W. 298, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 806 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

LOONEY, J.

This suit is for damages for false imprisonment. Appellant’s answer is the general issue. On a general verdict, judgment in favor of appellees was rendered for $7,500, from which appellant prosecutes this appeal.

It will not be necessary to notice the pleadings of the parties; they were sufficient to admit the evidence adduced, and no question involving the same is presented for our revision.

Appellant in several ways, by appropriate assignments and propositions, challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the fact, as found by the jury, that Mrs. Caldwell, on the occasion in question, was falsely imprisoned or illegally restrained of her liberty by appellant.

The following are the material facts bearing upon this issue:

On October 19, 1922, Mrs. C. E. Caldwell, wife of C. E. Caldwell, resident of the city of Dallas, visited the department store of A. Harris & Co., of the same city, and, after spending some time looking at the display of merchandise, purchased two small articles of neckwear, and was standing at 'the counter waiting for the saleslady to deliver her packages when a Mrs. Bowers, employed as house detective by appellant, in the discharge of her duty and acting within the scope of her employment, suddenly accosted Mrs. Caldwell, took her firmly by the arm, looking her straight in the eye, said, “You come with me,” at the same time taking from Mrs. Caldwell the packages she had just received, refusing to permit appellee to carry her own packages, saying, “No; I will carry them * * * you come with me, you are wanted up in the office, don’t make a scene.” At this appellee inquired, “What have I done?” The detective answered, “Well, you are wanted up in the office. * * * I am with the city, and they have sent for me to come and get you.” And thereupon she asked Mrs. Caldwell, “Are you -,” giving the name of another individual, to which appellee answered, “No; I *299 am Mrs. C. E. Caldwell.” Mrs. Bowers replied, “Xes; Mrs. Caldwell, I know you, you Lave been identified by the cash girl,” and also stated that she had been identified by the floor walker, who was standing near and watching the proceedings, as “the party I want, the little lady with the tan suit and brown hat.” Appellee again asked what she had done, and Mrs. Bowers replied, “Xou come with me,” saying that some one had forged a cheek on C. E. Caldwell in the meantime holding Mrs. Caldwell by the arm, and escorted her around to the elevator. Mrs. Bowers was not with the city nor was she an official but a private employé of appellant, and acted in no other- capacity.

Mrs. Caldwell was at the time convalescing from a protracted illness, and was very much shocked, frightened, confused, and humiliated by reason of this experience. She made no attempt to pull loose from Mrs. Bowers, was afraid to do so; any such attempt would have involved her in an unseemly scuffle with the Bowers woman under the gaze of from 50 to 75 customers and employSs then in the store. Under compulsion of these circumstances, Mrs. Caldwell submitted to the restraint imposed on her by the house detective and obeyed her orders.

It satisfactorily appears that, prior to the day in question, a young woman, whose name need not be mentioned in this connection, had made purchases of different articles at appellant’s store and had them charged to the account of other people, and on the day before she was in the store and made such a fraudulent charge. The credit department of appellant notified the different cashiers, buyers, and managers in the store to be on the lookout for this young woman, and, if discovered, she was to be taken to the office, located on the fifth floor of appellant’s mercantile establishment. This young woman was in the store on the day in question and at the same time Mrs. Caldwell was there, had made purchases, attempting to work the fraudulent scheme of having the same charged to other people. The cashier who wrapped the packages for the young woman notified the credit department, and Mrs. Bowers, the house detective, was also notified. It seems that Mrs. Caldwell and the young woman in question were near each other, and Mrs. Bowers, intending to accost the young woman, by mistake accosted Mrs. Caldwell, approached her in the manner before stated, took from her hands the packages, demanded that she accompany her to the office, and escorted her to the elevator and up to the offices on the fifth floor.

In the meantime, this young woman who was under suspicion became restive on account of the delay in receiving her packages from the' cashier, was in the act of leaving the building when stopped by Mr. Rosen-stein, manager of appellant’s gent’s furnishing department, and was by him carried for investigation to the offices of the credit de-' partment on the fifth floor. The mistake, it seems, was not discovered until Mrs. Bowers had taken Mrs. Caldwell to the offices above mentioned. Mrs. Caldwell was illegally restrained of her liberty altogether about 30 minutes. ■

Did these facts justify the submission of the issue and authorize the finding of the jury to the effect that Mrs. Caldwell was falsely imprisoned and illegally restrained of her liberty? We think so, clearly. False imprisonment is necessarily a wrongful interference with the persqnal freedom of an individual. The tort may be committed by acts alone or by words alone, or by both, operating on the will of the individual. It is not at all necessary that there be a confinement in order to constitute false imprisonment, nor that the wrongful act be committed with ill will, malice, wrongful intention, or under color of law, although in th^ instant case the wrongful detention was accomplished under color of legal authority. The essence of such an offense, and all that is required, is that the individual be restrained of liberty without legal warrant under circumstances either of words or acts, or both combined, that impose such restraint on the individual as may not be reasonably disregarded. M., K. & T. Ry. Co. of Tex. v. Warner, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 463, 49 S. W. 254; Cold v. Campbell, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 269, 117 S. W. 464, 465; Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Roberson (Tex. Civ. App.) 138 S. W. 822, 823; Thompson v. Buchholz, 107 Mo. App. 121, 81 S. W. 490, 491.

Applying this doctrine to the facts of the case, we conclude that the court was justified in submitting the issue of the false imprisonment to the jury, and tyiat the facts fully warranted the verdict.

The wrongful detention of Mrs. Caldwell was accomplished by a combination of words and acts. Mrs. Bowers, appellant’s house detective, acting within the scope of her authority, suddenly accosted Mrs. Caldwell while she was making purchases in the store, seized her by the arm, looked her straight in the face, rudely took from her the packages she had purchased, and, at this juncture, said: “Xou come with me, you are wanted up in the office, don’t make a scene; * * * I am with the city and they have sent for me to come and get you;” as much as to say, “I am a public official and what I am now doing and commanding you to do is by legal authority.”

In -determining whether these words and acts were sufficient to overawe, intimidate, or control- the will of appellee, the jury was privileged to look to all the facts and circumstances, including the sex and condition of health of Mrs. Caldwell. She was not called upon to resist, as she had the right to *300

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 298, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-harris-co-v-caldwell-texapp-1925.