Clark's Brooklyn Park, Inc. v. Hranicka & Kopasek

227 A.2d 726, 246 Md. 178, 1967 Md. LEXIS 441
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1967
Docket[No. 173, September Term, 1966.]
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 227 A.2d 726 (Clark's Brooklyn Park, Inc. v. Hranicka & Kopasek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark's Brooklyn Park, Inc. v. Hranicka & Kopasek, 227 A.2d 726, 246 Md. 178, 1967 Md. LEXIS 441 (Md. 1967).

Opinion

Finan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from judgments of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County in two consolidated actions of two counts each for slander and false imprisonment. The jury rendered verdicts of $10,000 in each case in favor of plaintiffs, which were reduced by remittitur to $7,500.

On the afternoon of September 19, 1964, plaintiff Joan Kopasek went shopping in Clark’s Brooklyn Park Department Store, owned by defendant, Clark’s Brooklyn Park, Inc. Upon arrival she telephoned plaintiff Joyce Hranicka (at that time Joyce Alexandrowicz) and arranged to meet her at the store’s snack bar. Joyce left her home dressed in slacks, blouse and sweater. The slacks, according to Joyce’s testimony, had been purchased at Clark’s some four weeks previously, and had not been washed. The girls met at the snack bar, had a coke and then proceeded to shop throughout the store. Both girls testified that they did not shop in that area of the store containing women’s clothing. Each made several purchases and paid for them at the check-out counter.

On the date in question, defendant had two employees at the cashier’s counter, Kay Crane, who operated the cash register, and Peggy Kingsley, who wrapped the merchandise. Crane testified that, as she was ringing up a sale for one of the plaintiffs, she was told by Kingsley to look at the slacks that Joyce was wearing. She looked and noticed “a pin ticket on her slacks.” She described a “pin ticket” as “a little piece of cardboard or some kind of material like cardboard, and it has Clark’s written in red at the top and it is pinned to the merchandise, * * Elsie Kisser, a concessionaire selling popcorn, hot dogs, soda and the like in Clark’s, testified that she saw a Clark’s tag pinned to the top of the slacks Joyce was wearing.

After paying for their purchases, plaintiffs left the store in *181 normal fashion, went to the parking lot and got into Joan’s automobile. Meanwhile, Crane had called the head cashier pursuant to store procedure. According to Crane, the head cashier was instructed to announce a code number over the store’s public address system, which would alert the store detective to trouble and bring him to the check-out counter to investigate. Joan and Joyce testified that they had been sitting in the car approximately five minutes when a man, later identified as Mr. Chalk the store detective, rapped on the car window and displayed a badge. He ordered them out of the automobile, with which request they complied, and he asked them whether they had a pink sweater in the car. Joyce testified that she told him that she was wearing a pink sweater. Chalk then entered the vehicle and searched it thoroughly, opening their packages. While this was taking place, Mr. Cohen, the assistant manager of Clark’s, had driven his automobile behind the Kopasek vehicle in such a way as to block its exit. This scene attracted, according to Joan’s estimate, “every bit of a hundred and fifty,” persons including friends of Joan’s, who “were just staring.” Joyce also estimated the onlookers at 150 persons. One of Joan’s friends called her husband and father for her. Joan also testified : “I had heard so many people around the car tell me, if I were you (sic) take your packages back and get your money back, they’re accusing you of stealing.”

Chalk informed Joyce that she would have to return to the store with him. Joyce refused to do so until she called her father, which she was permitted to do in the presence of Chalk. Joyce’s father arrived and he, Joyce, Chalk and Cohen returned to the store at Joyce’s father’s suggestion. Once in the store they were taken to an area described by Joyce’s father as a “lay-a-way warehouse.” According to Joyce’s testimony she showed them that there were no tags on her slacks and they said they were sorry and admitted a mistake had been made. Joyce’s father testified that he asked Mr. Schloss, manager of Clark’s, to put a one-page add in the paper to clear Joan’s and Joyce’s names; this he refused to do. Joyce further testified that, while the discussion with Clark’s employees was taking place, “the cashier kept hollering, ‘yes, she took those slacks,’ •after they already told me that I was innocent, and then she *182 keeps hollering it out when we were walking out the door.” Once outside they met Joan, her father, and her husband. They all proceeded back into the store and had further discussions with Cohen and Chalk. Before leaving, Crane, the cashier, told Joyce’s father that she had “seen tags on the pants that she [Joyce] wore out of the store.”

After defining the law of slander and false imprisonment, the learned trial judge instructed the jury as follows :

“Now also, if you find from the evidence that the defendants had probable cause to go after these girls, detain them, if you find that they did detain them and accuse them, if you so find that, for shoplifting then you’re entitled to consider this probable cause in mitigation of damages. In other words, if you feel that the girl, the cashier, and Cohen and Chalk and these other men had probable cause to suspect these girls then you can consider that in mitigation or cutting down the damages in awarding the damages, but you can’t consider that as a complete defense to the charge.”

The jury’s assessments of damages were total, being based on both counts in each case, and defendant made no request for their allocation either before or after they were rendered. Defendant moved for a new trial or in the alternative judgment non obstante veredicto. After a hearing, judgment n.o.v. was denied and the lower court further ordered that unless remittiturs of $2,500 were entered in each case the motion for a new trial would be granted; remittiturs in the specified amounts were filed and judgments entered on the verdicts as remitted. This appeal followed.

This appeal presents the following questions for this Court to decide:

1. Is Chapter 269 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1961 (Art. 27, § 551A Code (1957), titled “Crimes and Punishments”, sub-titled “Shoplifting”) unconstitutional because the title of the Act is defective and misleading in contravention of Art. Ill, § 29 of The Constitution of the State of Maryland?

2. Did the trial court commit prejudicial error in instructing the jury that evidence of the existence of probable cause to de *183 tain the plaintiffs could not be considered by way of a defense for the defendant but could be considered by way of mitigation of damages.

I

The title of Chapter 269 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1961 reads as follows:

“AN ACT to add a new Section 551A to Article 27 of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1957 Edition AND 1960 SUPPLEMENT), title ‘Crimes and Punishments’, to follow immediately after Section 551 thereof and to be under the new sub-title ‘Shoplifting’, providing a criminal statute for offenses herein defined as ‘shoplifting’, and relating generally to the offense of shoplifting and other penalties therefor in this State.”

The section of the Act providing for the merchants’ immunity from civil liability when the detention of the suspected shoplifter is justified on reasonable grounds is § (C) and reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
227 A.2d 726, 246 Md. 178, 1967 Md. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarks-brooklyn-park-inc-v-hranicka-kopasek-md-1967.