Clinchfield Coal Corp. v. Redd

96 S.E. 836, 123 Va. 420, 1918 Va. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 836 (Clinchfield Coal Corp. v. Redd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clinchfield Coal Corp. v. Redd, 96 S.E. 836, 123 Va. 420, 1918 Va. LEXIS 42 (Va. 1918).

Opinion

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion- of the court.

In this action for malicious prosecution S. M. Redd, herein referred to as the plaintiff, recovered against the Clinchfield Coal Corporation, herein referred to as the defendant, a verdict for $1,800, and the trial court, in accordance therewith, rendered the judgment under review.'

The evidence was in some respects conflicting, but was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding the following material facts: The plaintiff, whose home was at Gate City, Virginia, was a member of the firm of Vaughan & Redd, contractors, engaged at the time of the alleged grievance, July, 1916, in constructing a highway in West Virginia. He came to Virginia for the purpose of employing laborers for his firm. After hiring some men at Honaker, a town not far from the defendant’s coal mining plant at Dante, in Russell county, Va., he was told that the mines at the latter place had been shut down on account of a wash-out on the railroad and would not start up for two or three months, that many of the employees were leaving the plant, and that he could secure plenty of men there. A young man named Thompson, one of the laborers whom he had hired at Honaker, lived at-Dante, and said he could go there and engage the men. Redd feared that this might be a vio - lation of the statute prohibiting labor agents from soliciting laborers without a license, and, therefore declined to send him on the mission alone, but he took Thompson with him to furnish the names of some country boys living near Dante, who Thompson thought would like to- get employment in West Virginia, and the two went to Dante, arriving there on the afternoon of July 24. The plaintiff, finding that the mines had not been shut down altogether, and finding further that there were no idle men around the place, and being told by Thompson that the boys he had in mind had gone away, decided to leave the next morning for West Virginia, [427]*427and instructed Thompson to meet him at- the depot accordingly. While he was at the depot the next day, a man named Phillips, who seems to have been a labor agent for the defendant company, told him that he had a boy who was too light for mine work, and that it would be all right with the superintendent of the company for the plaintiff to-take this boy if he would pay for his transportation and what the labor agent had spent on him. The plaintiff replied that he would take the boy if it was agreeable, and thereupon Phillips said he would go to see the superintendent and report the result of his interview. Phillips returned after the train started, but in time for him to get aboard. The plaintiff, his employee, young Thompson, the boy, whose name was King, the labor agent Phillips, and a special officer also named Thompson, all boarded the train. The boy, King, approached the plaintiff and said, “That man says it will be all right for me to go with you,” and the plaintiff then paid the fare of both King and Thompson. Shortly afterwards the plaintiff saw the special officer talking to the two men whose fare he had paid, and thought they looked frightened. He approached them and asked about the trouble. The officer then charged him with being a labor agent, to which he replied, “I am no labor agent, but I have hired this man Thompson at Honaker, and understood it was all right for this other man to go with me, I do not want to take' him unless it is all right for him to go with me.” The officer then inquired if the plaintiff had paid the boy’s transportation, and upon receiving an affirmative answer informed the plaintiff that he was under arrest, and displayed his official badge. The plaintiff then asked what the officer was going to do With him, and the latter replied that he was going to take him back to Dante and try him. The plaintiff said, “You had better be sure you know what you are doing about this thing,” and thereupon the officer, who was much the larger of the two men, struck the plaintiff in the face and knocked him down.

[428]*428It may be well at this point to state that this speciál officer was employed directly and primarily by the Baldwin Detective Agency, of Roanoke, but appears to have been giving his entire time and attention to the service and interests of the defendant company. ' The company called him a special officer, and secured him from the detective agency for the purpose of keeping order in and around the camp, and he was also expected and understood to look after the labor situation, including any violation of law occasioned by labor agents.

The plaintiff asked the officer to take him down to St. Paul and give him an opportunity to prove who he was and clear the matter up, but he refused to do this and took him off the train at Hamlin, a station about .four miles from Dante, procured a justice of the peace, and took .the plaintiff, the two boys and the justice in an automobile back to Dante to the office of Mr. Lee Long, the general superintendent of the defendant company. There the plaintiff explained to Mr. Long that he was a member of the firm of Vaughan & Redd, and was simply endeavoring to hire men for the use of his own firm, that it was not his intention to break any law, and that he had been advised by counsel that hiring laborers for himself was not illegal. Mr. Long reprimanded him for what he was doing and expressed the opinion that he had been guilty of a “damned dirty trick.” The plaintiff asked the superintendent if he could not put up a bond and go away, and the former replied that he would call up his attorneys, and that when he heard from them he would let him know. That afternoon the plaintiff secured an attorney and was allowed by the justice of the peace to give security to appear back at Dante on August 1st for trial. The justice was not requested to issue any warrant at Hamlin, nor until after he arrived at Dante, and after there had been a preliminary interview between the officer and Mr. Long at the latter’s office, followed by another at [429]*429which the justice and the plaintiff were also present. The warrant was then issued by the justice, not in the presence of Mr. Long, but, as appeared upon its face, upon complaint made by him; and, while the justice could not state that Mr. Long had specifically directed him to issue the warrant, the interview at which it was determined to have the same issued was in Mr. Long’s presence,- and the justice understood thát it was issued at his instance. Mr. Long’s recollection and testimony was to the contrary.

The plaintiff appeared on August 1st, pursuant to his recognizance, but the case was carried over to the next day at the instance of Mr. Long, because he had not yet heard from his counsel. The warrant was then dismissed by his direction.

In their excellent and elaborate brief in this case, counsel for the defendant say:' “The action sounded in tort. The real gravamen of the action seems to have been based on an alleged malicious prosecution, but the doctrine of the torts known as false arrest and false imprisonment and the doctrine of the torts known as malicious prosecution are so confused and commingled in the pleading and in the evidence, if not in the instructions themselves, that we do not know whether the verdict and judgment against the defendant were based on an-alleged false imprisonment, or an alleged malicious prosecution, or both.” And they present a strong argument and array of authorities to show that there could be no liability upon the facts of the case for false arrest and imprisonment.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 836, 123 Va. 420, 1918 Va. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinchfield-coal-corp-v-redd-va-1918.