Glickman v. Harlan Wallins Coal Co.

133 S.W.2d 718, 280 Ky. 477, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 14, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 S.W.2d 718 (Glickman v. Harlan Wallins Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glickman v. Harlan Wallins Coal Co., 133 S.W.2d 718, 280 Ky. 477, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 151 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

This action was brought in the Harlan circuit court by the appellant, Isaac (Hickman, an itinerant merchant, against the appellees, Harlan Wallins Coal Company and Pearl Bassham, to recover damages for his alleged false arrest and imprisonment.

Prom a judgment entered by the Hon. Joe C. Baker, special judge, on a directed verdict given at the conclusion of all the evidence, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Appellant asks a reversal of this judgment upon the ground assigned that the court, in sustaining the defendants ’ motion for a peremptory instruction and in so directing the jury, committed a reversible error.

*478 Such being the character of appellant’s attack on the judgment, it is needful, for a clear understanding of our decision of the merit of the attack, that we herein set out a summary of the facts pleaded and testified to by plaintiff and his witness, which were held insufficient to raise a factual issue calling for its submission to the jury.

The appellant by his petition alleged in substance that on Thursday, October 1, 1936, at about noon, the defendants jointly, falsely, maliciously and without probable cause therefor, illegally and against plaintiff’s will and consent, caused him to be arrested publicly at Yerda by a deputy sheriff and carried thence, in the presence of many people, to Harlan, the county seat, some seven miles distant, where he was illegally, falsely and maliciously imprisoned in the jail for some hours or until released on executing a bond to appear in the Harlan county court for trial, which was set for the Saturday following, upon the charge made against' him, that he had trespassed upon the mining property of the defendant upon the occasion in evidence; that on plaintiff’s appearing for trial on the date set, the case was continued until the next Saturday, October 10, at which time he again appeared, when the charge was dismissed without trial. His petition further alleged that this wanton, willful and malicious arrest and imprisonment of him had directly and proximately caused plaintiff much physical pain and mental anguish and “had injured him in his credit and circumstances,” for which he prayed that he be adjudged damages against the defendants, the Harlan Wallins Coal Company and Pearl Bassham, jointly and severally, in the sum of $10,000 and costs.

The defendants filed separate answers, by which they each denied the allegations of the petition and prayed that it be dismissed.

The facts attending the alleged false arrest of the plaintiff, as his and his witnesses’ testimony conduce to show, are that at the time of making this trip to Yerda and for several years prior thereto he was engaged in selling bedclothing upon the installment payment plan to the men employed by the defendant company in its mine at Yerda; that on the occasion in evidence, he and his driver, Lewis Pratt, had driven from Pineville to Yerda, where they arrived about 11 A. M., when his car *479 was stopped on the' public highway, in front of the mining property of the defendant and that, upon his getting out and going to its rear, he was taken hold of and arrested by Wash Irvin, a Harlan County Deputy Sheriff.

Plaintiff’s somewhat feeling account and version of what then further occurred between him, Pearl Bass-ham and the deputy sheriff, terminating in the latter’s alleged unlawful arrest of him, is as follows:

“We drive up on the side of the road * * * and I got out of the truck, and went to back to open up, and Wash Irvin run up to me, and say to get the devil out of here, and said you can’t sell no goods in here, we have goods to sell, and I say why don’t you sell it, and P told him I have been coming’ here for two years and nobody ever bothered me, and he said it didn’t make any difference you get out of here, and I say I will see Mr. Bassham, and see what he says about it, and he says he is at. dinner, and I say I will wait until after his dinner, * * * and see what he says, and he hollered for somebody and said go tell Bassham I want to see him and directly Bassham came out, and he said this man don’t want to leave the camp, and he said ' put him in jail, put him in jail, right now, and Wash Irvin took me by the arm and I said you are hurting my arm, and I don’t mean no offense, I am going if I have to go to jail, and my driver spoke up and said not to hurt me, and he said to him, if you say another word I will put you in jail too. He took me to his car, and took me to jail, and I told my driver to follow, and I will tell him what to do. He took me right up to jail, and the jailer asked for the warrant, and he said I haven’t got any warrant, and he said what is he charged with, and he said trespassing, and he locked me up.”

When plaintiff was asked if he knew the defendant, Pearl Bassham, and how long had he known him, he answered, “Yes sir, two years; no, four years.” Also, when asked, “Where were you when Wash Irvin arrested you?” he answered, “I was on the public highway at Verda” and that he was not on the defendant coal company’s premises at all; that when Irvin took him to the jailer, he told the jailer he had no warrant for his (Glickman’s) arrest, but nevertheless he was locked up in jail, where he was confined for three or *480 four hours, until released upon .friends coming to his aid and executing bond for his appearance for trial, as stated supra; also that, when he appeared in court at the time set for his trial, there was nobody there but Wash Irvin, and he was told by the judge that Pearl Bassham was out of town and couldn’t be there and that trial of the case was postponed until the following Saturday, when, again, neither Irvin nor Bass-ham, the prosecuting witnesses, appearing, the judge said to him, “Gliekman, go home and forget about it.”

Gliekman further testifies that upon being dismissed, he decided that he had better go back over to Yerda and see Bassham and find out if he could collect some of his accounts that were owing him by the miners, and that they drove from Harlan down to Yerda, and:

“We went into the office. Bassham was sitting there in his office instead of being in Knoxville, and he said what do you want, and I said I come to see if I can collect the money I had out, and he said no sir, you can’t collect up here, get the devil away from here.”

Further he testifies that Irvin, the deputy sheriff, after arresting him, at Yerda, on the order of Bassham, who, it is admitted, was then vice president and supervisory agent of the defendant company, carried him in his car directly to the jail in Harlan, where some forty or fifty people saw him brought to jail against his will, and locked up in the jail. Further he testified that Irvin never at any time, when arresting him, either had or showed him a warrant ordering his arrest, nor said he had a warrant for his arrest, nor did he ever see any warrant in his possession, calling for his arrest.

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Related

Brown v. Crumpton
252 S.W.2d 670 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1952)
Glickman v. Cornett Lewis Coal Co.
169 S.W.2d 599 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W.2d 718, 280 Ky. 477, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glickman-v-harlan-wallins-coal-co-kyctapphigh-1939.