Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Smith

136 S.W.2d 759, 281 Ky. 583, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 136 S.W.2d 759 (Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Smith) 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
Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Smith, 136 S.W.2d 759, 281 Ky. 583, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 37 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

— Reversing.

This is an action of tort for alleged false imprisonment.

The defendants’ motion to make the petition more certain and specific and, if more than one canse of action is therein relied on, that the same be separately paragraphed, having been overruled, the defendants further moved, both at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and of all the evidence, for a directed verdict, which was also denied. They appeal,-complaining of such rulings as erroneous, as well as other errors assigned, upon which they seek a reversal of the judgment.

In November, 1937, the appellee filed her petition and also an amended and substituted petition against appellants, seeking recovery of damages for nervous shock and mental suffering allegedly caused by the claimed misconduct of the company’s agent and store manager, Robert Vaughn, in falsely imprisoning and detaining her as she was leaving its store located at First and Jefferson Streets, Louisville, Kentucky.

Plaintiff, in setting out her cause of action, seeking recovery of damages against defendants for her wrongful detention, alleges that on October 13, 1937, she visited the appellant’s store; that after making a small candy purchase (which, it is admitted by Vaughn, the co-defendant and store manager, had been by him both sold her and placed in her shopping bag at the candy counter, and for which she there paid him) and as she was proceeding to leave the store, the said Vaughn, acting as the company’s agent and store manager and in the course of his employment, “suddenly grabbed her and laid hold upon her hands, arms and body in the presence of a number of customers in defendant’s store and imputed unto her that she had stolen certain articles from said store and thereupon forcibly, unlawfully, and against her will and consent took her into custody and detained her and deprived her of her right of freedom and locomotion and publicly searched her and her shopping bag and finding nothing * * * about her per *587 son or said shopping bag except what had been bought and paid for, released her.”

Further, in the petition she alleged that, by reason and as the result of such unlawful actions and conduct of the defendant company, committed by and through its store manager, Vaughn, she was caused to and did suffer great humiliation and embarrassment and was thereby damaged in her reputation and did suffer great shock to her nerves and nervous system and was made to and did become physically ill and sick and had been thereby damaged in the sum of $10,000, for which amount, with her costs, she prayed judgment.

To this petition defendants filed motion, as stated supra, to require plaintiff to make her petition more definite and certain and, if stating more than one cause of action, to paragraph same.

This motion the court ordered submitted and same having been briefed by counsel for the defendants and plaintiff and plaintiff’s counsel having therein stated, in reference to the petition, that “we think it clearly sets - forth but one cause of action; namely, that of false imprisonment,” the court, concurring in that view and being of the opinion that “the action is for the alleged detention, other matters being in aggravation,” overruled the motion.

Defendants next filed a general demurrer to the petition, which was also overruled, when the issues were completed by the defendants filing their answer and plaintiff replying thereto.

The cause coming on for trial, the defendants renewed their motion to make more definite and to paragraph the petitions, which was again overruled by the court by a nunc pro tunc order entered of its earlier order, made but not entered by the clerk, overruling the motion.

The cause then proceeded to trial, resulting in the jury’s awarding plaintiff two separate verdicts, the one for compensatory damages in the sum of $2,000, the other for punitive damages in the sum of $500, upon which judgment was accordingly entered.

Appellants’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, they have appealed, seeking a reversal of this judgment upon the following assignment of errors:

*588 (1) The court’s error in failing to sustain their motion to make the petition more definite and to paragraph same.

(2) The court’s error in failing to give a peremptory instruction in favor of appellants, moved for at the conclusion of the introduction of appellee’s evidence and at the conclusion of all the evidence, because the proof was insufficient to show a detention and there was a fatal variance between the pleadings and proof.

(3) The court’s error in refusing appellants’ motion for a continuance, made at the close of the case, for the same reasons.

(4) Because the actions of appellant Vaughn, in examining appellee’s shopping bag, were not unlawful if done in a reasonable manner and no recovery against appellants was allowable on account of such actions and that therefore the instructions given, authorizing such recovery, were erroneous.

(5) That appellee’s claim being for mental disturbance only, without physical injury, no recovery was allowable, for which reason the court erred in overruling their demurrer to the petition and in giving an instruction authorizing a recovery.

(6) That even if compensatory damages for mental suffering were recoverable, the evidence was not sufficient to support a verdict of $2,000 compensatory damages and that the total verdict was so large as to impel the belief that it was the result of passion and prejudice.

(7) That the court was in error in authorizing a recovery of punitive damages.

The facts as shown by the proof introduced respectively by the parties in support and defense of the cause of action alleged are that on the morning of October 13, 1937, the appellee, an elderly widow then some sixty-eight years of age and who had, for some fourteen years been and was then living in Louisville, started out from her home with her friend and neighbor, Mrs. Hoppenjohn, on a shopping expedition,

After first visiting several stores, at which Mrs. Smith purchased a few articles (which, as purchased, she put in the shopping bag she carried), they next went to the appellant’s store so that Mrs. Smith could buy some candy, on which she states appellant was advertising a special sale. Upon entering the store, Mrs. Mop *589 penjohn waited at the door, while Mrs. Smith, after inquiring where the candy sale was being conducted, went directly to the candy counter, where she purchased the candy wanted and there paid the clerk who waited on her (who it develops was the store manager and appellant, Mr. Vaughn), who, upon being paid for the candy, placed it in Mrs. Smith’s shopping bag along with the other articles she had purchased elsewhere and was carxying therein. She states that she then, having thus bought what she had come to the store for, went no further about the store, but at once started back towards the entrance to rejoin her friend there awaiting her and .leave the store.

She states that as she was thus leaving and was passing through the narrow turnstile exit next to the •checking counter, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.W.2d 759, 281 Ky. 583, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-atlantic-pacific-tea-co-v-smith-kyctapphigh-1939.