Barth v. Keller

42 N.E.2d 871, 315 Ill. App. 200, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 847
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 19, 1942
DocketGen. No. 41,676
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 N.E.2d 871 (Barth v. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barth v. Keller, 42 N.E.2d 871, 315 Ill. App. 200, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 847 (Ill. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal defendant Leonard Keller seeks to reverse a judgment for $750 rendered against him upon the verdict of a jury in an action brought by plaintiff, W. J. Barth.

The complaint alleged substantially that plaintiff was a physician and defendant was a dentist; that they shared a suite of offices at 2753 North Western avenue, Chicago, consisting of a private office for each of them and a reception room which they used in common; that defendant employed one Blanche Tayne as a receptionist; that defendant and said Blanche Tayne conspired to injure plaintiff in his good name and credit, to bring him into public scandal and disgrace and to cause him to be imprisoned or fined or both by maliciously instituting a criminal prosecution charging him with indecent exposure of his person in violation of ‘ ‘ Section 4221 of the ordinances of the City of Chicago”; that on April 5, 1938 Blanche Tayne filed a complaint in the municipal court of Chicago charging plaintiff with indecent exposure of his person in violation of the aforesaid ordinance and procured a warrant for his arrest; that plaintiff was arrested April 13, 1938; that when the case against him in the municipal court was called for trial on April 15, 1938, it was dismissed for want of prosecution and he was discharged from custody; and that plaintiff sustained damages to the extent of $10,000 by reason of the alleged conspiracy and the action brought against him in the municipal court.

Both Keller and Blanche Tayne were made defendants in the instant action but the latter was never served with summons. Defendant Keller filed an answer denying all the material allegations of the complaint and particularly those allegations charging him with conspiracy.

Dr. Keller states his theory in his brief as follows: “Defendant denies that he entered into any conspiracy with Blanche Tayne or any other person to institute or have instituted any criminal proceeding or any proceedings of any kind against the plaintiff. He denies that he was in any way responsible for the proceedings instituted by Blanche Tayne; that he did not sign the complaint or have anything to do with the signing of the complaint which instituted the proceedings against plaintiff in this case. Defendant further contends that there was no proof of a malicious prosecution and further contends that there was no proof of a conspiracy between him and Blanche Tayne, and that the evidence does not support the allegations of the complaint; - that the termination of the case by agreement of the parties, whereby the suit was dismissed for want of prosecution and defendant discharged from custody is not such a determination of a criminal proceeding on which a suit for malicious prosecution may be predicated. That the evidence fails to show that the plaintiff suffered any actual damages.”

Plaintiff’s theory is that “the defendant, after quarreling with plaintiff, did, in every conceivable manner, harass plaintiff in an effort to inflict harm upon him. After feuding with plaintiff for a long period of time, he conceived the idea of hiring Mrs. Tayne as a receptionist and conspired with her to have plaintiff arrested, charging him with an offense involving moral turpitude, so that it would harm plaintiff in his professional capacity. ’ ’

Plaintiff is a physician and surgeon and defendant is a dentist. They became office associates in the summer of 1935 in a suite at 2753 North Western avenue, Chicago. Plaintiff maintained office hours during the entire day until 6 p.m. in his office at said address. Defendant also had an office in the Marshall Field Annex Building, where he practiced his profession during the morning. His office hours at the Western avenue address were from 1:30 or 2 p.m. until late in the evening. For the first two years or until the summer of 1937, the parties were on friendly terms. Each had a telephone in his private office and under an arrangement between them plaintiff answered defendant’s telephone calls when the latter was not present in his office in the morning and defendant took care of plaintiff’s telephone calls in the evening. In the summer of 1937 plaintiff learned that defendant had failed to answer some of the former’s telephone calls and a heated argument ensued, as a result of which the friendly relationship that had theretofore existed between the parties ceased. Thereafter there was almost constant bickering and dissension between them. It became necessary for defendant to engage somebody to take care of his office and telephone calls during the morning and until he arrived at his Western avenue office. For that purpose he employed a young married woman, who with her husband and infant child occupied a small apartment immediately across the hall, one room of which adjoined defendant’s private office. There was a connecting door between said apartment and his private office, which defendant made available to this woman so that she might answer his telephone calls. It is clear from the evidence that plaintiff’s conduct toward this woman was reprehensible and that he finally persuaded and influenced the landlord to bring about her removal from her apartment. Plaintiff then rented this apartment himself. Because of her removal from the building, this young woman was unable to continue in defendant’s employment. In February 1938 plaintiff engaged one Blanche Tayne as a receptionist and to answer his telephone calls, Mrs. Tayne and her husband having theretofore been patients of his. March 31, 1938 Mrs. Tayne called the police. Police officer William Bunge, who responded to the police call, testified: “When we arrived there We walked up the stairs. It was the second floor. And the woman was there . . . we asked her what the trouble was 1 . . And she said that Dr. Barth had annoyed her and exposed his person to her that morning, and I told her I would talk to Dr. Barth about it, and knocked at his office door. And I told him what she accused him of. And in the meantime, Dr. Keller came in. And Dr. Barth flew in a rage and wanted to fight with Dr. Keller and I stopped him there, and I said, ‘The only way for those to settle this is for this woman to go see the warrant clerk on the following day or on a Monday and to swear out a warrant, and to see whether they would give her a warrant or not. That was all up to the warrant clerk.’ And she said she would. And we left after that. Dr. Barth denied the charges that this woman put to him.” Officer Bunge also testified that Dr. Keller did not arrive on the scene until after the officer had talked to Mrs. Tayne and confronted Dr. Barth in his office with Mrs. Tayne’s charge against him.

Defendant testified that Mrs. Tayne telephoned him on the day in question and informed him as to plaintiff’s conduct and that he advised her to tell her husband, who worked in a nearby garage. Defendant was unable to leave his downtown office at once on account of patients who required his attention. When he did reach his office on the northwest side the police officers were already there. According to the defendant Dr. Barth was very belligerent and “Mrs. Tayne was tearful and did not have very much to say there at all and the police officer told her in my presence to take out a warrant against Dr. Barth. ’ ’

On the same day, March 31, 1938, Mrs. Tayne went to the police station with her husband to procure a warrant for Dr. Barth’s arrest but because of the absence of the warrant clerk she was unable to secure such warrant. April 5, 1938 defendant drove Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E.2d 871, 315 Ill. App. 200, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barth-v-keller-illappct-1942.