American Express Co. v. Patterson

73 Ind. 430
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7410
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 73 Ind. 430 (American Express Co. v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Express Co. v. Patterson, 73 Ind. 430 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

“Woods, J.

— Complaint in three paragraphs for false imprisonment, to each of which paragraphs the appellants jointly and severally demurred. Demurrers overruled, and exception. Issues of fact; jury trial; verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. Motions for a venire de novo and for a new trial made and overruled, and exception.

It is not necessary to set out the complaint in full. The counsel for the appellants admit that the three paragraphs are all based on the same transaction, and do not differ except in giving details, and in the method of charging the several defendants, differences which will be notioed so far as it may become necessary.

It is objected to the first paragraph of the complaint that it shows no cause of action against the defendant Richey.

The verdict was silent concerning Richey, and before taking judgment thereon against the appellants, the appellee dismissed the case as to him. He does not complain, and is not a party to the appeal. It is clear, for reasons which will be stated when we come to consider the motion for a venire de novo, that in this respect the court committed nO' error.

The further objection is made that the paragraph contains no direct charge against the express company; that the acts of Hazen, as alleged, constituted an unlawful trespass, an assault and battery, for which the corporation could not be held liable, without showing that it authorized him to do the acts complained of, or that he did them in the line of his duty as agent of .the company. And it is contended, in this connection, that the complaint is not made good against the company by the averment which is made, that the acts of Hazen were done “at the instigation and procurement of the [433]*433defendant, the American Express Company that the words “instigation and procurement” are not terms which of themselves convey any legal charge ; that the means and the manner of instigation and procurement should have been stated, just as in making a charge of fraud it is necessary to allege the facts which constitute the fraud.

We do not think of more apt words with which the company could have been charged with responsibility. But, if the objection were well taken, the pleading would nevertheless be good on demurrer, but subject to a motion to be made more specific. Stated succinctly, the complaint shows that on the 18th day of September, 1876, the plaintiff was arrested by said Hazen, without process or warrant, at St. Paul, Minnesota, on the false and groundless charge of the larceny of $1,015 from the office of said company in Muncie, Indiana; that said Hazen then and there forcibly took the plaintiff to the office, and before the officers of said company in said city, where, by the direction and order of the officers of said company, the plaintiff was further imprisoned, his baggage searched, the keys to his baggage taken from him by force and violence, his baggage rifled, and papers and other articles t$iken therefrom and forcibly and without right detained from him ; that, on the 20th day of said month, said defendants still holding the plaintiff in custody by violence, as aforesaid, forcibly and by intimidation and threats, took him from said city of St. Paul to Indianapolis, Indiana, at the instigation and by the procurement of the defendants, the American Express Company, Edward W. Sloan, one Julien, and William Brown, and that the parties last aforesaid there forcibly with strong hand and without legal authority or warrant of any kind, forcibly and by threats kept the plaintiff imprisoned and restrained of his liberty for six days, and denied him access to friends, attorneys, or any persons except said Hazen and the other agents of said company, and said Sloan and Julien, and so [434]*434held him imprisoned until set at liberty on a writ of habeas corpus, directed to and against said defendants, and on which they produced him, without alleging anything against him.

The transaction thus shown concerned the business of the company : that is to say, the recovery of money lost by the company, and which the plaintiff: was supposed, by the officers of the company, to have stolen ; or, if not the recovery of the money,.then, at least, the punishment of the supposed thief; and probably both these objects were aimed at. We think it clear that the corporation had the power, by proper and lawful modes, to pursue and cause the arrest and punishment of any one who had stolen or embezzled the money or property of the company, or for which it was responsible. If not expressly granted it, this power must be implied from the nature and necessities of the business of an express company. Such companies must be deemed to be empowered to employ agents to do such work, as much as to accomplish its ordinary purposes and business. It sufficiently appears that the defendant corporation did employ, instigate and procure the action of Ha-zen, as set forth. From this it necessarily follows that the company must be held liable for any trespass committed by her said agent in the prosecution of that employment, according to the general rule by which the master is held responsible for the conduct of his servant. That rule, as applicable to corporate bodies, has been laid down for this State, and, as we believe, in harmony with the current of authority, as follows : “We think it is well settled that a corporation is liable for the wilful acts and torts of its agents committed within the general scope of their employment, as well as acts of negligence ; and that the corporation is thus bound, although the particular acts were not previously authorized, nor subsequently ratified, by the corporation.” The Jeffersonville R. R. Co. v. Rogers, 38 Ind. 116 ; The Indianapolis, etc., R.W. Co. v. Anthony, 43 Ind. 183. An apt [435]*435Illustration, as well as interesting discussion of the doctrine, ■is found in Craker v. The C. and N. W. Railway Co., 36 Wis. 657, S. C., 17 Am. Rep. 504, wherein the railway company was held liable for the act of a conductor who kissed a ■female passenger against her will.

The paragraph of the complaint under consideration charges directly that the alleged injury to the plaintiff was done at the instigation and procurement of the appellant, the express company. The demurrer admits the fact, and under ■such general averment, there having been no motion for a more specific statement of the facts, it was competent for the plaintiff to offer any evidence which tended to show the ‘truth of the allegation. The Ohio, etc., R. W. Co. v. Collarn, ante, p. 261; The Brookville, etc., Turnpike Co. v. Pumphrey, 59 Ind. 78 ; The Pennsylvania Co. v. Sedwick, 59 Ind. 336 ; The Cincinnati, etc., R. R. Co. v. Chester, 57 Ind. 297 ; Hildebrand v. The Toledo, etc., R. W. Co., 47 Ind. 399.

It follows from what has already been said, that the court ■committed no error in refusing the fifth instruction asked by said defendant, which was this, viz.:

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ind. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-express-co-v-patterson-ind-1881.