Duran v. Buttrey Food, Inc.

616 P.2d 327, 189 Mont. 381, 1980 Mont. LEXIS 836
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1980
Docket14660
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 616 P.2d 327 (Duran v. Buttrey Food, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duran v. Buttrey Food, Inc., 616 P.2d 327, 189 Mont. 381, 1980 Mont. LEXIS 836 (Mo. 1980).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

[383]*383This is an appeal from a judgment against the plaintiff after a jury verdict in the District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District, Yellowstone County, in a suit for damages for false arrest. Plaintiff also appeals from the District Court’s dismissal of her claim for malicious prosecution.

On March 16, 1976, plaintiff Karen C. Duran went to the But-trey Food-Osco Drug store on Central Avenue in Billings, Montana, with her friend Yvonne Saunders. They parked near the entrance and entered the store. Beyond that point, the facts in this case are in dispute. According to appellant, she and Yvonne Saunders stopped at the cosmetics aisle where she looked at some lipstick.

The two women then proceeded to another part of the store where appellant tried unsuccessfully to find an electrical connector which her husband had requested her to pick up, not being sure of the correct size. From there appellant and Saunders walked to the front of the store where they looked at some macrame plant hangers. At that point, appellant went to the courtesy counter and purchased two packages of cigarettes while Saunders went back into the store, saying that she had someting else she wanted to check on and that she would meet appellant outside in the car. As Duran was exiting the store, she was stopped by a clerk who asked to examine her purse. She showed him the purse, and finding nothing he allowed her to leave the store, which she did. Appellant then returned to Yvonne Saunders’ car and waited.

About ten minutes later as Saunders was leaving the store, four employees of Buttrey and Oseo followed her out and accused her of shoplifting and demanded she return to the store. After a scuffle, Saunders returned with three of the employees. Bruce McKay, one of the employees, approached appellant, who was sitting in the car, accused her of shoplifting and grabbed her purse. Finding nothing, he threw the purse back at Duran and left a fourth employee to guard her until the police arrived. Following the arrival of the police, Duran was taken upstairs in the store where she was ar[384]*384rested. She was then taken to the police department, booked for theft and taken to the county courthouse to await bonding.

Buttrey contends that shortly after Duran and Saunders entered the store, Yvonne Saunders was recognized as a known shoplifter by Diane Eldridge, an Oseo employee, who communicated this information to Osco’s assistant manager, Bruce McKay. After observing Karen Duran pick up two packages of lipstick, Ms. Eldridge proceeded to the store offices at the rear of the building, one-half flight upstairs. From there and from catwalks along the entire rear length of the building, she and McKay observed appellant and Saunders through one-way mirrors. They maintain that they saw Karen Duran pass the two packages of lipstick to Yvonne Saunders who was standing behind her and who put them in her purse. Both McKay and Eldridge further testified that they watched Saunders pick up a jigsaw from a display and place it in her purse and take a sawblade and place it down the waistband of her pants. While this was being done, Karen Duran was immediately adjacent to her and in a position where she could see all that went on. A third store employee who had been alerted testified that he saw one of the women open her purse while the other woman placed a package of cheese products in it.

The Buttrey-Osco employees maintain that Karen Duran and Yvonne Saunders were together the entire time they were in the store and that they exited the store at the same time, contrary to appellant’s testimony. The employees contend that they followed the two women out of the store and apprehended them at the car, bringing Yvonne Saunders back to the store to wait for the police to arrive. Karen Duran waited in the car after one of the store employees asked to see her purse, examined it, and found none of the stolen merchandise. The employee remained with appellant until the police arrived, about twenty minutes later, at which time she was taken into the store and arrested. A search of Yvonne Saunders at the premises turned up the jigsaw and other merchandise, and she was also arrested.

[385]*385It is undisputed that appellant was later tried on a shoplifting charge arising out of this incident before the Billings police court and found guilty on April 27, 1976. She appealed to the District Court and was found not guilty by a District Court jury after a trial de novo. She later sued Buttrey Food, Inc., Oseo Drug, Inc, and Bruce McKay for false arrest and malicious prosecution. The District Court dismissed the malicious prosecution charge and submitted the false arrest charge to the jury, which found for the defendants. Karen Duran brings this appeal from the judgment of the District Court.

Appellant raises six issues in this appeal:

1. Whether the court erred in refusing to enter the default of Buttrey Food, Inc., since it was not a properly registered corporation.

2. Whether the defendants had probable cause to arrest Karen Duran and whether the court committed error in directing a verdict on the malicious prosecution charge.

3. Whether the court erred in denying plaintiff’s motion in limine and allowing evidence of Yvonne Saunders’ reputation for shoplifting, while granting the defendants’ motion.

4. Whether the merchant detention statutes, sections 46-6-502 and 46-6-503, MCA, are unconstitutional violations of the right of privacy.

5. Whether the court erred in instructing the jury on the crime of accountability for aiding and abetting the commission of an offense, where plaintiff was never charged with that offense and where it was not pleaded as a defense.

6. Whether or not the court improperly refused plaintiff’s offered proof of damages.

Appellant’s first ground for reversal is that a default judgment should have been entered against defendant Buttrey Food, Inc., for the reason that this defendant was not properly registered as a foreign corporation pursuant to sections 35-1-1015, 35-1-1016, and 35-1-1101, MCA. On March 28, 1977, approx[386]*386iniately one month before this suit was filed on May 2, 1977, the records of the Secretan' of State showed Buttrey Food, Inc., as an Illinois corporation. However, in its answer and subsequent pleadings, this party designated itself as Buttrey Food Stores Division, Jewel Companies, Inc., a New York corporation. Appellant contends that Buttrey neglected to notify the Secretary of State of the corporate change by failing to file amended articles of incorporation pursuant to section 35-1-1015, MCA, by failing to file articles of merger pursuant to section 35-1-1016, MCA, and by failing to file a proper annual report pursuant to section 35-1-1101, MCA. As a consequence of these failures, appellant argues that Buttrey lacked a valid certificate of authority to transact business in this state and that a default judgment should have been entered against that defendant. This argument is without merit.

Although the first paragraph of section 35-1-1004, MCA, states that:

“No foreign corporation transacting business in this state without a certificate of authority shall be permitted to maintain any action, suit, or proceeding in any court in this state until such corporation shall have obtained a certificate of authority . . .” the second paragraph makes it clear that:

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Duran v. Buttrey Food, Inc.
616 P.2d 327 (Montana Supreme Court, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
616 P.2d 327, 189 Mont. 381, 1980 Mont. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duran-v-buttrey-food-inc-mont-1980.