Bry-Block Mercantile Co. v. Proctor

10 Tenn. App. 651, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 651 (Bry-Block Mercantile Co. v. Proctor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bry-Block Mercantile Co. v. Proctor, 10 Tenn. App. 651, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

For convenience the parties will be referred to as in the court below, Mrs. J. M. Proctor, plaintiff, and Bry-Block Mercantile Co., Hayes Flowers, Jack Dillon and 0. L. Wooley, defendants.

The plaintiff sued the defendants jointly for damages growing out of the transaction in which the plaintiff was arrested on a warrant charging her with larceny while she was engaged as a saleslady in the Bry-Block Mercantile Co., store in Memphis. The declaration was in three counts. The first count charged malicious prosecution in the swearing out of the warrant and in having plaintiff arrested on said warrant. The second and third counts charged conspiracy of the defendants jointly to slander and slandering the plaintiff by accusing her. to others with having stolen certain property from the defendant, Bry-Block Mercantile Co. A demurrer was filed to the second and third counts, and was sustained by the court, but plaintiff was permitted to amend the second and third counts, and the second and third counts of the declaration as amended were also demurred to by the defendants, and this demurrer was overruled and disallowed. The defendants then filed a plea of not guilty to each of the counts of the declaration. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendants moved the court for a directed verdict, which motion was overruled, and at the conclusion of all the evidence the defendants again moved for a directed' verdict on each of the three counts of the declaration. The court sustained the motion for *653 a directed verdict, or ratber indicated! that lie would sustain the motion for a directed verdict as to tbe second and third counts, and whereupon, the plaintiff took a non-suit as to the second and third counts. Whereupon, the court overruled the motion for a directed verdict made by the defendants to the first count. The suit was voluntarily dismissed as to Flowers.

The trial of the case resulted in a verdict by the jury of $5,000 compensatory damages and $2500 punitive damages.

A motion for a new trial was made by the respective defendants, which motion was overruled by the court and a judgment rendered against the three remaining defendants for the sum of $7,500, and the costs of the case.

From the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial and rendering judgment against the defendants, they have appealed to this court in the nature of a writ of error, and have assigned errors.

The first assignment is that there is no evidence to support the verdict, and the second and third assignments allege error in overruling the motion of defendants for a directed verdict in' their favor, first, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence in chief, and second, in overruling defendants’ motion for a directed verdict in their favor made at the close of all the evidence. These three assignments will be considered and disposed of collectively later in this opinion.

The fourth assignment is directed to the following portion of the charge of the court:

“Now, Gentlemen, there are, as you know, many different crimes and degrees of crimes, but I am of the opinion, as a matter of law, that if Mrs. Proctor, as a saleslady at Brys; made an exchange of a gown, by fraudulently doing so in that no gown was given her by the prospective purchaser for the one that she gave the purchaser, that the existence of that fact or those facts, would not be probable cause for the particular crime that she is charged with in this warrant, that she feloni-ously, did steal, take, carry away one lady’s gown, the property of New Bry’s, the value of $2.98. This is one feature of the question of probable cause.”

On the question of the correctness of this charge, it becomes necessary to state the facts as disclosed by the record. It appears that the plaintiff, Mrs. J. M. Proctor, had been employed for a considerable time in the silk underwear department of the Bry-Block Mercantile Co., in Memphis, and at the time of the incident out of which this suit arose, she was the assistant manager of the silk underwear department. She had been employed by the defendant, Bry-Block Mercantile Co., for about seven years, beginning as a saleslady, and was gradually promoted to the position of assistant *654 manager of the department. The Bry-Block Mercantile Co. operated a large department store in the City of Memphis, and was generally referred to as Bry’s, or New Bry’s, or the Bry-Block Mercantile Co., but its corporate name was “Bry-Block Mercantile Co., Inc.” This concern had many various departments, and numerous employees, managers, superintendents, etc. On January 24, 1927, the defendant, O. L. Wooley, who was at that time the assistant superintendent in the employ of Bry-Block Mercantile Co., and1 also as a part of his duties, served as a kind of house detective, received information from one of the lady employees in the store, that certain irregularities and- petty thefts were being committed by Mrs. Proctor. It appears that this lady got her information as to these irregularities from other young ladies working in the department under Mrs. Proctor. Upon receiving this information, Mr. Wooley had several of the young ladies working in the department to come to his office where he interviewed! them separately, and from them obtained written statements relative to certain acts of Mrs. Proctor. The substance of all these statements was that, a Miss Henderson who was employed in the bakery department as a saleslady, came to the silk underwear department ostensibly to purchase a lady’s nightgown; that she did not have any package of any kind with her at the time, and after a selection was made Mrs. Proctor had one of the sales girls in the department to make out a check on the usual form provided, which showed the nightgown purchased' at the price of $2.98, and on the same check was written one nightgown, $2.98, returned, or exchanged. Upon these statements having been signed by several of the salesladies in the department, who claimed to have witnessed the transaction and to have observed that no purchase was actually made, but that the nightgown had been given to Miss Henderson by Mrs. Proctor, and the ticket or check for the sale was so made as to have it appear that the nightgown had been purchased and exchanged, Mr. Wooley sent for Miss Henderson and interviewed her with reference to the transaction, and Miss Henderson admitted that she had not purchased the nightgown, but stated that she had given to Mrs. Proctor bread and rolls from the bakery department, and that when she went to the silk underwear department she told Mrs. Proctor about the price of gown that she desired to purchase, but Mrs. Proctor showed to her a more expensive gown, and when she went to pay for the same Mrs. Proctor declined to take the money but made up the ticket, or had the same done, by another lady who worked in the department, so as to have it appear that a nightgown had been exchanged:, and gave to her the nightgown in question. Miss Henderson made a written statement and signed the same disclosing the nature of the transaction.

*655 After business hours, Mr. Wooley called Mrs.

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10 Tenn. App. 651, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bry-block-mercantile-co-v-proctor-tennctapp-1929.