Coyne v. Nelson

237 P.2d 45, 107 Cal. App. 2d 469, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1930
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1951
DocketCiv. 18318
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 237 P.2d 45 (Coyne v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coyne v. Nelson, 237 P.2d 45, 107 Cal. App. 2d 469, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1930 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

VICKERS, J. pro tem.

Action for damages for false imprisonment. Judgment for plaintiff.

Plaintiff-respondent filed suit against the appellant Ebbert, a police officer, and several other defendants for damages for false imprisonment. After trial before the court without a jury, the plaintiff having dismissed as to the defendants Dan Nelson and L. M. Nevarez, the court gave judgment against the appellant’ and the defendants Michael Krempels and James Snyder for. $750, as compensatory damages, and against the appellant and the defendant Michael Krempels for $500, as punitive damages. Thereafter the appellant and these defendants moved for a new trial. The court denied such motions. From the judgment and the order denying a new trial Ebbert alone , appeals. The appellant attacks the judgment on the ground that the evidence does not support some of the findings and that the findings as to compensatory damages are irreconcilable.

The court found in part as follows: That the respondent, a real estate broker, was falsely accused by appellant (and other defendants) of stealing property and was falsely arrested and imprisoned by appellant against respondent’s will; that in so doing appellant did not believe respondent had committed any crime or have reasonable grounds or probable cause for so believing; that appellant acted maliciously and to plaintiff’s damage.

A reading of the reporter’s transcript discloses the following evidentiary facts which the court was entitled to believe: That for several years prior to May 14, 1948, respondent had *471 been a successful real estate broker; that just prior to and on May 14, 1948, the defendants Krempels and Dan Nelson and the respondent were engaged in a complicated real estate transaction involving a motel in Atwater, California; that respondent was to receive a $3,000 commission from Krempels; that during the course thereof Krempels, through the respondent, exchanged certain diamonds for a house trailer (referred to generally by the witnesses as “the bus”), owned by one Lyton; that Lyton, at Krempels’ suggestion, delivered “the bus” to the respondent together with the pink slip therefor assigned in blank; that respondent thereupon executed and delivered his promissory note, dated May 3, 1948, in the sum of $4,500, to and in favor of Krempels and assigned to Krempels his $3,000 commission; that there was an understanding between Krempels and respondent that respondent would sell “the bus” and deliver the proceeds of the sale to Krempels; that shortly thereafter respondent brought “the bus” to Los Angeles and to San Fernando to find a buyer. It further appears that during the course of the transaction the respondent on April 11, 1948, executed and delivered his check in the sum of $10,000 to and in favor of Nelson and that at the time of the delivery thereof the respondent did not have sufficient funds in the bank, upon which the check was drawn, to meet the cheek but that he so informed Nelson and Krempels at the time of issuance and further informed them that he would obtain the necessary funds from another real estate transaction and would deposit them to cover the cheek; that shortly before May 14, 1948, the date of the claimed false imprisonment, the defendant Snyder was brought into the transaction with the intent of all parties that he would be substituted for and take the place of the respondent. It further appears that during the daytime of May 14, 1948, Krempels caused a police officer of the city of San Fernando to investigate the respondent, who was then living with his wife and children in “the bus” in that city, upon a charge that the respondent had stolen “the bus,” but that after a discussion with the respondent, during which he exhibited to that police officer the pink slip and his policy of insurance covering “the bus,” the officer informed Krempels that there was ho ground for an arrest of the respondent; that on the evening of the same day Krempels, Nelson and Snyder went to the office of Attorney Joseph Forno in Los Angeles and discussed some phases of the matter with him and at that *472 time Krempels, Nelson or Attorney Forno, or all of them, telephoned the appellant, a police officer of the city of Los Angeles, who was off duty, at his residence in Hollywood; that that night the defendants Nelson, Snyder and Krempels drove to appellant’s residence in Hollywood; that after some discussion Nelson loaned Krempels $100 in currency and Krempels handed some currency to the appellant; that thereupon Nelson, Snyder, Krempels and appellant and a friend of appellant, named Boyd, drove to the place where the respondent was living in “the bus” arriving about 9 p.m.; that appellant knocked on the door of “the bus” and when the respondent and his wife came to the door announced that he was a police officer and intended to take the respondent “in”; that upon being asked for his authority he produced a pair of handcuffs and stated that they were all the authority he needed; that respondent, who had retired, was instructed by the appellant to dress and thereupon, over his protest, appellant forcibly took him to the automobile and forced him to enter the same; that appellant told respondent and his wife that he was going to take him to jail or to room 21 in the city hall of Los Angeles (police headquarters) and permitted respondent’s wife to telephone his attorney, Thomas Connell; that respondent demanded to be taken to a judge or that he be released and permitted to leave the automobile, and attempted to get out, whereupon appellant handcuffed his arms behind him; that respondent and appellant, Krempels, Nelson and Boyd were then driven by Snyder to the rooms of Krempels and Nelson in the Rosslyn Hotel. It further appears that during the trip respondent was seated in the rear of the car between appellant and Boyd, who he thought was a police officer, and at Nelson’s suggestion the handcuffs were removed; that Krempels accused respondent of stealing “the bus” and stated he wanted the $4,500 or the pink slip and “the bus”; that respondent refused to comply and demanded that he be taken to jail or before a judge; that appellant asked respondent if he had the pink slip; that nothing was said about the $10,000 check; that upon arrival at the rooms of Krempels and Nelson the respondent demanded that he be allowed to call his lawyer but the appellant refused to let him do so and ordered him to sit in a certain chair and to remain (¡here; that between 30 minutes and an hour thereafter appellant permitted respondent to call his lawyer Connell, which he did; that Mr. Connell arrived about 30 minutes thereafter; that respondent was detained in the rooms until about 4 a.m. *473 the next morning when appellant told him he could go home; that during the time that respondent was detained in the rooms Krempels kept insisting that the respondent pay him the $4,500 or surrender the pink slip and “the bus,” which the respondent refused to do and stated that Krempels would have to pay him the $3,000 commission due him from the real estate transaction; that no mention was made of the $10,000 check; that respondent was not taken to jail or before a magistrate and was returned to “the bus” in San Fernando by defendant Snyder about daylight.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P.2d 45, 107 Cal. App. 2d 469, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coyne-v-nelson-calctapp-1951.