Blakely v. Greene

24 F.2d 676, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2138
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 1928
DocketNos. 2651, 2652
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 F.2d 676 (Blakely v. Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blakely v. Greene, 24 F.2d 676, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2138 (4th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

WADDILL, Circuit Judge.

These are two actions for malicious prosecution, one by R. E. Greene and the other by R. B. Greene, against J. W. Blakely and the Peerless Steam Laundry Company, a corporation. The parties will be referred to by their titles in the District Court. The two Greenes were brothers, and were both formerly employed by the Peerless Steam Laundry Company. The two eases were instituted in the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, at Bluefield, and the facts in both are substantially the same. They were, by agreement of the parties, tried together, and separate verdicts brought in in each ease. In the ease of R. E. Greene, the jury rendered a verdict against both defendants for $1,500, and in that of R. B. Greene for $2,500. Judgments were entered upon both verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs, from which the defendants sued out these writs of error, seeking to have reviewed and reversed the judgments so rendered. By agreement of the parties one bill of exceptions was taken in the two eases, with the understanding that the same should be applied and considered as the bill of exceptions in both cases, and that only one record was to be printed.

Issue was regularly joined upon the pleadings in each ease. A large number of witnesses were examined by the respective sides in the effort to sustain their several contentions, and as to practically all of the essential features the testimony of the witnesses was in sharp conflict. R. E. Greene was employed by the defendant company in July, 1923, and R. B. Greene in March, 1924. At that time a Mr. Hutcherson was in charge of the company, and in March, 1924, U. P. McFarland was made manager, and so remained until the employment of the Greenes ceased, in January and February, 1926, respectively. The Greenes were employed by the laundry company as drivers of trucks, and were assigned to different routes, and their duties were to gather up laundry, bring it to the plant to be washed and ironed, and deliver it back to the customers, collecting from the customers upon the delivery of the laundered material, and to account to the laundry company for the money so collected. During the year 1925 the company had six drivers, in addition to the Greenes, and when the laundry was collected and brought to the plant a list was kept of the articles to be laundered, and the customers to whom each package belonged. The packages of soiled laundry were charged to the drivers on what was eallqd the “driver’s sheet,” as they were brought in, and upon the laundry being prepared for delivery, each driver would take the packages that had been brought in by him back to the customers and receive credit as delivered, and collected for, or return the undelivered packages to the company.

McFarland, the ■ manager, testified that the drivers were to collect the money for the laundry upon delivering the same to the customers, and were given explicit orders and instructions not to extend credit, and in the event a driver violated this order he was to be responsible, and the amount lost by reason of such credit was to be deducted from the amount due him when the weekly settlement was made. At these weekly settlements credit was given for any laundry brought hack, or which could not be delivered, and for re[678]*678pairs necessary to be made to the truck ■while delivering the laundry, together with other necessary expenses incurred by the driver, for which money was paid and receipts taken, and presented at such weekly settlements. L. E. Woods, who was president of the defendant company during the year 1925, stated that it was the policy of the company not to permit the drivers to allow credit to customers for laundry. McFarland testified that R. B. Greene was to receive a commission of 20 per cent, during 1925 on laundry gathered by him, for which he made collection and delivered the money to the company; that these commissions were paid weekly by check'; that R. E. Greene was guaranteed $15 per week salary for the first $100, and a commission of 12 per cent, on laundry for from $100 to $200, and 15 per cent, on laundry from $200 to $300, and that such salary and commissions were paid each week by cheek; that these checks due drivers were calculated on the basis of laundry brought in by them and the laundry charged to.them, less such packages which the drivers could not deliver, and less expenses actually incurred by them for repairs to laundry vehicles, or for any money actually paid by them for laundry misplaced or lost at the plant.

As to the agreements of employment, there was a conflict between the testimony of McFarland and the Greene brothers. R. B. Greene testified that his commission was 20 per cent., and arrived at by the amount of laundry brought in to the plant, and not by the amount which he delivered and collected for, and that, if -he extended credit and failed thereafter to collect for the same, the company lost; that he had authority from McFarland, the manager, thus to allow credit, and that McFarland told him that that was the only way he could get the business. R. E. Greene corroborated R. B. Greene as to their right to credit customers, and said that the authority so to do was given by McFarland, and that he had authority under his contract to give- credit as he pleased, and had the right also to take the laundry and deliver it back to the customers; that the loss fell upon the company, and not upon him, if he failed to collect the sum for which he gave credit; that the company furnished the truck used by him, paying for gasoline and repairs thereto.

On the question as to the right to extend credit, and upon whom the loss should fall if credit was given, there was a direct conflict in the testimony. E. E. Thorpe and W. T. Lea, drivers working for the company during the period of the Greenes’ employment, sustained the Greenes’ contention, and Clyde Sisk, R. B. Armentrout, and K. C. Stewart, also drivers during that period for the laundry company, testified for the defendant company. W. T. Lea testified, as did Thorpe, that they settled any losses arising from, credits extended by them; that McFarland knew of the extension of credit; that on one occasion McFarland in his own handwriting made, a memorandum of credit he had given. McFarland admitted that he knew that some of the drivers were allowing credit, but with the understanding that, if they did not collect it, the amounts would be taken out of their commissions or salary.

The testimony established that all of the drivers made practically regular weekly settlements, until about the month of June, 1925. Subsequent to the month of June, 1925, the two Greenes did not come to the office of the company or make further weekly settlements, and did not thereafter indorse or accept any more weekly commission cheeks, although they remained in the service of the company until January, 1926. The cheeks for cash due in the case of R. B.Greene amounted to $1,380.18, and in the case of R. E. Greene, $1,067.75. The Greenes testified that the reason for not promptly making settlements was that they could not-get McFarland, the manager,, to make the same with them. R. B. Greene said that he made repeated efforts to make McFarland settle with him, but could not get him to do so, and that McFarland always gave some excuse or another. R. E. Greene testified that he made settlements regularly with McFarland from the fall of 1924 until June, 1925, and said that the reason that he did not make a settlement after that date was that, when he saw McFarland and asked about doing so, McFarland said he did not have time. Greene says he did not catch McFarland, because he wanted to save time, as he was busy.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F.2d 676, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blakely-v-greene-ca4-1928.