Coblyn v. Kennedy's, Inc.

268 N.E.2d 860, 359 Mass. 319, 47 A.L.R. 3d 991, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 818
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 15, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 268 N.E.2d 860 (Coblyn v. Kennedy's, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coblyn v. Kennedy's, Inc., 268 N.E.2d 860, 359 Mass. 319, 47 A.L.R. 3d 991, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 818 (Mass. 1971).

Opinion

*320 Spiegel, J.

This is an action of tort for false imprisonment. 1 At the close of the evidence the defendants filed a motion for directed verdicts which was denied. The jury returned verdicts for the plaintiff in the sum of $12,500. The case is here on the defendants’ exceptions to the denial of their motion and to the refusal of the trial judge to give certain requested instructions to the jury.

We state the pertinent evidence most favorable- to the plaintiff. On March 5, 1965, the plaintiff went to Kennedy’s, Inc. (Kennedy’s), a store in Boston. He was seventy years of age and about five feet four inches in height. He was wearing a woolen shirt, which was “open at the neck,” a topcoat and a hat. “QAJround his neck” he wore an ascot which he had “purchased . . . previously at Filenes.” He proceeded to the second floor of Kennedy’s to purchase a sport coat. He removed his hat, topcoat and ascot, putting the ascot in his pocket. After, purchasing a sport coat and leaving it for alterations, he put on his hat and coat and walked downstairs. Just prior to exiting through the outside door of the store, he stopped, took the ascot out of his pocket, put it around his neck, and knotted it. The knot was visible “above the lapels of his shirt.” The only stop that the plaintiff made on the first floor was immediately in front of the exit in order to put on his ascot.

Just as the plaintiff stepped out of the door, the defendant Goss, an employee, “loomed up” in front of him with Ms hand up and said: “Stop. Where did you get that scarf?” The plaintiff responded, “[WJhy?” Goss firmly grasped the plamtiff’s arm and said: “[Y]ou better go back and see the manager.” Another employee was standing next to him. Eight or ten other people were standing around and were starmg at the plaintiff. The plaintiff then said, “Yes, I’ll go back in the store” and proceeded to. do so. As he and Goss went upstairs to the second floor, *321 the plaintiff paused twice because of chest and back pains. After reaching the second floor, the salesman from whom he had purchased the coat recognized him and asked what the trouble was. The plaintiff then asked: “[W]hy ‘these two gentlemen stop me?’ ” The salesman confirmed that the plaintiff had purchased a sport coat and that the ascot belonged to him.

The salesman became alarmed by the plaintiff’s appearance and the store nurse was called. She brought the plaintiff into the nurse’s room and gave him a soda mint tablet. As a direct result of the emotional upset caused by the incident, the plaintiff was hospitalized and treated for a “myocardial infarct.”

Initially, the defendants contend that as a matter of law the plaintiff was not falsely imprisoned. They argue that no unlawful restraint was imposed by either force or threat upon the plaintiff’s freedom of movement. Wax v. McGrath, 255 Mass. 340, 342. However, “|T]he law is well settled that ‘[V]ny general restraint is sufficient to constitute an imprisonment . . .’ and ‘[a]ny demonstration of physical power which, to all appearances, can be avoided only by submission, operates as effectually to constitute an imprisonment, if submitted to, as if any amount of force had been exercised.’ ‘If a man is restrained of his personal liberty by fear of a personal difficulty, that amounts to a false imprisonment’ within the legal meaning of such term.” Jacques v. Childs Dining Hall Co. 244 Mass. 438, 438-439.

We think it is clear that there was sufficient evidence of unlawful restraint to submit this question to the jury. Just as the plaintiff had stepped out of the door of the store, the defendant Goss stopped him, firmly grasped his arm and told him that he had “better go back and see the manager.” There was another employee at his side. The plaintiff was an elderly man and there were other people standing around staring at him. Considering the plaintiff’s age and his heart condition, it is hardly to be expected that with one employee in front of him firmly grasping *322 his arm and another at his side the plaintiff could do other than comply with Goss’s “request” that he go back and see the manager. The physical restraint imposed upon the plaintiff when Goss grasped the plaintiff’s arm readily distinguishes this case from Sweeney v. F. W. Woolworth Co. 247 Mass. 277, relied upon by the defendants.

In addition, as this court observed in the Jacques case, supra, at p. 441, the “honesty and veracity [of the plaintiff] had been openly . . . challenged. If she had gone out before . . . [exonerating herself], her departure well might have been interpreted by the lookers on as an admission of guilt, or of circumstances from which guilt might be inferred. The situation was in the control of the defendant. The restraint or duress imposed by the mode of investigation . . . the jury could say was for the accomplishment of the defendant’s purpose, even if no threats of public exposure or of arrest were made, and no physical restraint of . . . [the plaintiff] was attempted.” For cases in other jurisdictions, where the evidence tended to support the tort of false imprisonment, see Clark v. Kroger Co. 382 F. 2d 562, 563 (7th Cir.); Patrick v. Esso Standard Oil Co. 156 F. Supp. 336, 340 (D. N. J.); Daniel v. Phillips Petroleum Co. 229 Mo. App. 150, 155; Lukas v. J. C. Penney Co. 233 Ore. 345, 354.

The defendants next contend that the detention of the plaintiff was sanctioned by G. L. c. 231, § 94B, inserted by St. 1958, c. 337. This statute provides as follows: “In an action for false arrest or false imprisonment brought by any person by reason of having been detained for questioning on or in the immediate vicinity of the premises of a merchant, if such person was detained in a reasonable manner and for not more than a reasonable length of time by a person authorized to make arrests or by the merchant or his agent or servant authorized for such purpose and if there were reasonable grounds to believe that the person so detained was committing or attempting to commit larceny of goods for sale on such premises, it shall be a defence to such action. If such goods had not been purchased and *323 were concealed on or amongst the belongings of a person so detained it shall be presumed that there were reasonable grounds for such belief.”

The defendants argue in accordance with the conditions imposed in the statute that the plaintiff was detained in a reasonable manner for a reasonable length of time and that Goss had reasonable grounds for believing that the plaintiff was attempting to commit larceny of goods held for sale.

It is conceded that the detention was for a reasonable length of time. See Proulx v. Pinkerton’s Natl. Detective Agency, Inc. 343 Mass. 390, 392-393. We need not decide whether the detention was effected in a reasonable manner for we are of opinion that there were no reasonable grounds for believing that the plaintiff was committing larceny and, therefore, he should not have been detained at all.

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Bluebook (online)
268 N.E.2d 860, 359 Mass. 319, 47 A.L.R. 3d 991, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coblyn-v-kennedys-inc-mass-1971.