Duprey v. J. C. Penney Co.

36 Va. Cir. 88, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1155
CourtAlbemarle County Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1995
DocketCase No. 6052-L
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Va. Cir. 88 (Duprey v. J. C. Penney Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Albemarle County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duprey v. J. C. Penney Co., 36 Va. Cir. 88, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1155 (Va. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

By Judge Paul M. Peatross, Jr.

This matter comes before the Court on the Demurrer filed by the Defendants, J. C. Penney Co., Inc., and Angela Peraldo, to the Motion for Judgment of the Plaintiff, Alison Francis Duprey. Assuming the facts as alleged by the Plaintiff to be true, the facts giving rise to this action are as follows.

On August 9,1994, the Plaintiff and her Mend, Andrea Lynn Huestis, both thirteen years old, were shopping for clothing in Penney’s department store in Fashion Square Mall. While shopping, the Plaintiff and Huestis had occasion to use one of a set of three dressing rooms in the store.

When the Plaintiff and Huestis attempted to leave the dressing rooms’ vicinity, Defendant Doe called to the Plaintiff and Huestis and demanded, in essentially these words, “Come here, young ladies; you have a mess to clean up.” Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Doe was an employee of Defendant Penney’s and that Defendant Peraldo acted in complicity with Doe throughout the events in question.

The Plaintiff and Huestis insisted that they had done nothing, but Doe stated that the girls “[knew] what [they] did” and repeated her demand that the girls clean up their “mess.” “Intimidated and overborne,” the Plaintiff and Huestis followed Doe into one of the dressing rooms. Motion for Judgment, para. 9.

Once inside the dressing room, Doe indicated that the “mess” the girls were supposed to clean was some urine in tke bottom of a trash can, for which Doe implied that one or both of the girls were responsible. On [89]*89Doe’s insistence, the Plaintiff and Huestis remained in the dressing room until they had cleaned up die urine, using paper towels with their bare hands. After the girls had finished cleaning, Doe permitted them to return to the custody of Plaintiff’s mother, who was in another part of Fashion Square Mall but whose presence neither Doe nor Peraldo had sought to ascertain.

Based on these facts, the Plaintiff sets forth six counts in her Motion for Judgment. The Court addresses each count in turn.

I. False Imprisonment

The Plaintiff alleges that Doe’s words and conduct resulted in a reasonable apprehension of force and thereby caused the Plaintiff to be confined unwillingly to the dressing room area, a result which Doe and Peraldo intended. In Zayre, Inc. v. Gowdy, 207 Va. 47 (1966), the Supreme Court described false imprisonment as follows:

False imprisonment is restraint of one’s liberty without any sufficient cause therefor [sic]. It is not essential that a citizen be confined in jail or placed in the custody of an officer. If a person is under a reasonable apprehension that force will be used unless he willingly submits, and he does submit to the extent that he is denied freedom of action, this, in legal contemplation, constitutes false imprisonment.

207 Va. 47, 50-51 (1966); see also S. H. Kress & Co. v. Musgrove, 153 Va. 348, 356 (1929) (to constitute false imprisonment it is sufficient that a person reasonably fears that force will be employed if he or she does not submit and that the person consequently does submit and is thereby denied freedom of action).

The facts in Zayre involved two teenage girls (ages 13 and 14), one of whom had purchased a bathing suit in the defendant’s store. Id. at 48-49. The purchaser changed into the suit before leaving the store, and when the girls had left the store, the store’s security officer stopped the girls on the sidewalk. Id. After the girls were unable to produce the sales receipt, the officer requested that they go back into the store; he permitted them to leave only after the sales clerk had identified the girls as having paid for the suit Id.

The Court held that the evidence was sufficient to constitute a jury question as to whether the girls had been falsely imprisoned. Id. at 51. The girls returned to the store because “the security guard was a person of [90]*90authority and the young ladies were afraid not to follow his directions. They were deprived of their right of freedom of movement and the right to come and go as they chose.” Id.

The facts of Zayre are similar to the facts in this action in dial both cases involve two teenage girls who allegedly were falsely imprisoned by officials of a department store. The facts are dissimilar with respect to the alleged offenses for which the stores restrained the girls’ movements. The facts are sufficiently similar, however, for this Court to overrule the Demurrer at this stage of the case.

IX. Assault

The Plaintiff alleges that the actions of Doe and Peraldo in insisting that the Plaintiff clean up the urine resulted in Plaintiff’s reasonable apprehension of an offensive contact with her person and thereby constitute an assault. The Defendants, however, define assault differently, asserting that a claim for assault must necessarily allege facts showing “any attempt or offer with force or violence to do a corporal hurt to another.” Jones v. Commonwealth, 184 Va. 679, 681 (1946).

The key aspects of the Jones court’s definition are (1) the meaning of “force” and (2) the meaning of “corporal hurt.” With respect to the second aspect, it appears to this Court that being required to place one’s hands in urine would constitute a corporal hurt. The Jones court, supra, indicated its understanding of “corporal hurt” in defining battery as “fire actual infliction of corporal hurt on another (e.g. the least touching of another’s person). . . whether by the party’s own hand, or by some means set in motion by him.” Id. at 682 (emphasis in original). Thus, if a corporal hurt results from the least touching of another’s person, the Plaintiff did receive a corporal hurt when required by the Defendant to touch the urine.

The question thus becomes whether the Defendant’s verbally ordering fire Plaintiff to clean the “mess” constitutes an offer of force. Plaintiff does not allege that the Defendant actually laid hands on her, but does allege that the Plaintiff submitted “to an apprehension of force that plaintiff then reasonably understood from the words and conduct of Doe." Motion for Judgment, para. 10 (emphasis supplied). Although Plaintiff does not specify what “words and conduct” gave rise to her apprehension of force, the Court finds that this pleading is sufficient to meet the definitional requirement of “assault” at this stage of the litigation.

The Second Restatement of Torts, which is cited by the Plaintiff, defines assault as “intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact with the [91]*91person of [another]... or an imminent apprehension of such a contact” See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 21 (1965). The Restatement pronounces that a bodily contact is “offensive” if it “offends a reasonable sense of personal dignity.” See id. § 19.

The Court finds that placing one’s hands in contact with urine might offend a reasonable sense of personal dignity and that a child would be apprehensive if required to do so. Thus, according to the authority provided by both the Defendants and the Plaintiff, the Defendants’ demurrer is overruled regarding the assault claim.

m. Battery

The definition of battery provided by the

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Related

Zayre of Virginia, Inc. v. Gowdy
147 S.E.2d 710 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1966)
Shupe v. ROSE'S STORES, INCORPORATED
192 S.E.2d 766 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1972)
Russo v. White
400 S.E.2d 160 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1991)
Fleming v. Moore
275 S.E.2d 632 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1981)
Darnell v. Davis
58 S.E.2d 68 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1950)
Womack v. Eldridge
210 S.E.2d 145 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1974)
White v. Barnes
139 Va. 471 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1924)
S. H. Kress & Co. v. Musgrove
149 S.E. 453 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1929)
Guide Publishing Co. v. Futrell
7 S.E.2d 133 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1940)
Jones v. Commonwealth
36 S.E.2d 571 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
36 Va. Cir. 88, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duprey-v-j-c-penney-co-vaccalbemarle-1995.