Biggans v. Hajoca Corp. Dash v. Hajoca Corp

185 F.2d 982, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3394
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 1950
Docket10163, 10164
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 982 (Biggans v. Hajoca Corp. Dash v. Hajoca Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biggans v. Hajoca Corp. Dash v. Hajoca Corp, 185 F.2d 982, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3394 (3d Cir. 1950).

Opinion

STALEY, Circuit Judge.

Much of the law governing the disposition of the issues here on appeal has been expounded at length in a recent opinion of this Court, 1 and need not be repeated. Even later decisions of Pennsylvania courts 2 demonstrate that the opinions handed down in Simpson v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 1946, 354 Pa. 87, 46 A.2d 674, and Curley v. Automobile Finance Co., 1941, 343 Pa. 280, 23 A.2d 48, which we interpreted in Van Sant v. American Express Co., 3 Cir. 1947, 169 F.2d 355, represent faithfully the law of Pennsylvania. 3 In charging the jury, the district judge noted the skill of counsel participating in the trial of the case at bar, which is disclosed also by the clarity of the record before us; it may be added that the opinion, D.C.E.D.Pa.1950, 94 F.Supp. 593 filed by the court below in denying the motion of defendant for judgment or for a new trial is a lucid analysis and adjudication of the- questions pressed on this appeal. In view of the foregoing factors, we need not launch into extended comment.

The issues posed by the instant appeal are (a) whether the trial judge was in error in permitting the jury to decide whether or not defendant had probable cause in instituting the criminal proceedings against plaintiffs; (b) whether the fact that defendant was acting under advice of counsel immunized defendant against liability in malicious prosecution actions; (c) whether a “crime policy” was erroneously admitted in evidence; and (d) whether a judgment as to damages constituted prejudicial error. Our answer, as to all the issues, is in the negative.

In the lower court, plaintiffs have won a jury verdict and a judgment. Resolving disputed facts in accordance with the verdict, 4 we may summarize the testimony as follows:

*984 Plaintiffs (“Dash” and “Biggans”), plumbing contractors, had been purchasing substantial quantities of plumbing supplies and fixtures from defendant (“Hajoca”) over a considerable period of time. 5 In August of 1947, Hajoca, believing that inventory 6 was disappearing unaccountably from its Philadelphia warehouse on North 9th Street, hired operatives of a 'private detective agency. One Lees, an employee of Hajoca for more than forty years, was seen by these detectives, who were in plain sight, to be delivering to plaintiffs 7 various articles, without making contemporaneous registry of them. The total value of those articles, as to each plaintiff, was $216 or less. Informed of what the operatives saw, the Hajoca officers asked the Hajoca general counsel whether further legal action was in order. Those officers did not tell counsel that, over an appreciable period of time, the company practice at the warehouse with regard to the registry of sales had been so lax that specific company corrective instructions on that very subject had been issued in August of 1947; nor did the Hajoca officers tell counsel that a claim had been made on a bond which presumably covered the company against such loss. The Hajoca general counsel, in turn, referred the information supplied him to another attorney, who was not advised of the standing, reputation, and responsibility of the plaintiffs. Both lawyers approved action which led to the arrest of Lees and another employee and later, after receiving further information, 8 of both plaintiffs. Neither plaintiff was asked, or given the opportunity, to explain the circumstances which appeared to implicate him in illegal activities. Lees and plaintiffs were eventually tried together, in the Quarter Sessions Court of Philadelphia County, and all were acquitted. The complaints at bar followed. 9

We think there was abundant evidence from which the jury could find, as the pivotal question of fact, that Hajoca did not have an honest and reasonable belief in the existence of a probable cause for the initiation of the prosecution of plaintiffs. See Curley v. Automobile Finance Co., 343 Pa. 280 at page 290, 23 A.2d 48 at page 53, and Campbell v. Yellow Cab Co., 3 Cir.1943, 137 F.2d 918, 922. As is well outlined in 3 Restatement, Torts, 1938 ed., § 662g, “Whether the accuser acts reasonably in relying upon the accuracy of such information .[given by a third person] depends not only upon the informant’s veracity * * * but also upon his [the accuser’s] opportunity for accurate observation and his equipment •for making it.” 10 From the evidence introduced, there was a permissible, if not compelling inference that the Hajoca officials and their attorneys had failed to take the elementary precaution of checking with their own supervisory personnel to ascertain what the warehouse practices *985 actually were. Moreover, the huge discrepancy between the value of the missing inventory and the value of the merchandise which Hajoca thought plaintiffs, not unimportant customers, were purloining was such as to permit a jury reasonably to conclude that Hajoca had rushed into a prosecution which a check of its own records might well have prevented. That Hajoca did not possess the reasonable belief which Pennsylvania law requires was clearly within the jury ambit.

Likewise, it was within the scope of the jury to conclude that the prosecution of plaintiffs was actuated by malice, in the legal sense. We can add but little to the comments of the court below on this question. The Curley and Van Sant cases, supra, echo the precepts set forth in Topic 4, Chapter 29, of 3 Restatement of the Law of Torts, 1938 ed. There being evidence that the activities of Hajoca were prompted in part by hope for private gain, the jury was the appropriate fact-finder as to whether Hajoca had an honest -and reasonable belief in the guilt of plaintiffs.

Hajoca contends, however, that the foregoing considerations are not here applicable, both because the company sought and acted upon advice of counsel and because the basis for finding a motive of private advantage was a “crime policy,” which, Hajoca urges, was inadmissible. In Jones v. MacConochie, 1948, 162 Pa. Super. 124 at page 127, 56 A.2d 284 at page 286, however, the principle was reiterated that advice of an attorney is a defense when sought in good faith and upon full disclosure. See also 3 Restatement of the Law of Torts, 1938 ed., § 666. In the light of the record, we are hardly prepared to say as a matter of law that Hajoca made full disclosure of the facts to the attorneys consulted or that a specific jury finding of lack of good faith would have been capricious.

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Bluebook (online)
185 F.2d 982, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biggans-v-hajoca-corp-dash-v-hajoca-corp-ca3-1950.