Greaves v. Kansas City Junior Orpheum

80 S.W.2d 228, 229 Mo. App. 663, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 7
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 80 S.W.2d 228 (Greaves v. Kansas City Junior Orpheum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greaves v. Kansas City Junior Orpheum, 80 S.W.2d 228, 229 Mo. App. 663, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 7 (Mo. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

*666 BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages for false arrest. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants for actual damages in the sum of $750 and for punitive damages in a like sum. Defendants have appealed.

The facts show that plaintiff was a man of good reputation, residing in Kansas City and, for a number of years prior to the month of October, 1931, had been engaged as head janitor and custodian of various theaters and office buildings in Kansas City and that he was employed as such by the defendant, Kansas City Junior Orpheum Company. This company operates the Mainstreet Theater, a large theater in Kansas City, seating over 3000 persons. Plaintiff’s employment with the defendant company started about the time that the theater was first opened in 1931. Between that time and October 15, 1931, plaintiff was so employed, although at intervals he worked elsewhere. He was discharged by the theater company on October 15, 1931, because his services were unsatisfactory. Defendant, Lawrence Lehman, was the general manager of the Mainstreet Theater and one Ray Marchbanks was his assistant and the treasurer of the theater.

The evidence further shows that in April, 1931, the seats on the main floor of the theater and three rows in the balcony, about 1800 in all, were removed and improvements were made in the cooling system; that the work of removing the seats was under the direction of one Sexton, employed by the Radio Keith Orpheum Company as superintendent of new construction and the remodeling of old theaters. That company is the parent company of the defendant, Kansas City Junior Orpheum Company. All of the fixed chairs were taken up and put into the crates which had contained the new chairs, being installed, and were afterwards stored in an adjacent building. However, there were 125 to 220 chairs in the boxes and loges situated to the sides of the theater. These loose chairs were referred to as bent wood chairs and were light and moveable, having cane bottoms. About 36 of the bent wood chairs were shipped to Cedar Rapids, Iowa. During the progress of the work and the removing of the chairs Sexton ordered plaintiff to remove the bent wood chairs from the loges and the boxes, select the good chairs, store them on the back stage and to place the defective chairs in the plenum chamber. All of this was done by plaintiff and his helpers or assistant janitors. The chairs were sorted in the theater. The good chairs were first placed on the back stage and thereafter carried by plaintiff and his helpers to the basement under the stage and stored in a place referred to in the evidence as the property room. The defective chairs, numbering about 50, were placed in the plenum chamber.

The plenum chamber was a part of the air conditioning system in the theater and was immediately below the lower floor of the audi *667 torium. This chamber was about five feet in height at the front end of the auditorium, or that opposite to the stage, and tapered off to a height of one foot at the stage end. The conditioned air was conveyed to the plenum chamber and from there it escaped into the auditorium by means of vents in the floor of the latter. The plenum chamber had been used for a catch-all; there was stored therein a lot of “rubbish, broken sign boards and other boards, painted signs and a lot of old frames and broken things,” also, “electric light bulbs, arc-lights and artists materials, old pipe and stuff like that.”

A short time after the defective chairs were stored in the plenum chamber, Sexton, on account of the fire hazard, ordered plaintiff to clean out everything in the chamber and, in this connection, he stated to plaintiff: “If you want to get rid of these chairs (in the plenum chamber) and sell them and make a few dollars out of them, you are perfectly welcome to have them.” Thereafter, plaintiff and the janitors under him cleaned out the plenum chamber but left the defective chairs therein. In July, 1931, desiring to sell the chairs in the plenum chamber, plaintiff called up by ’phone a secondhand man; who came to the theater and looked at them but only offered $4 for them. Plaintiff refused the offer. Later he asked one of his helpers, a colored man by the name of Lettus "Williams, if the latter knew of a secondhand man who might be interested in buying some of the chairs. Thereafter, Williams found a secondhand dealer by the name of Goodman. Goodman came to see plaintiff at the theater and the latter showed him the chairs in the plenum chamber and plaintiff tiff sold him ten chairs for a total sum of sixty cents. These chairs were hauled away by Goodman, being removed from the front part of the theater about '9:30 a. m. of the day of the sale. Williams assisted in carrying these chairs out of the theater. About the first week in September, plaintiff sold twelve more chairs to Goodman for $2.50, the chairs being taken from the plenum chamber and out of the stage door at the rear of the theater and loaded by plaintiff and Williams into a truck. This took place about 11:00 a. m. A few days later plaintiff sold twelve more chairs to Goodman for $2, the chairs being ing taken out by plaintiff and Williams from the plenum chamber, between 9:30 and 11:00 o ’clock a. m., and delivered to the Goodman truck at the stage door, as was done in the second sale. Part of the money received from the sale of the chairs'was paid by plaintiff to Williams.

Practically everything contained in the foregoing statement of facts appears in evidence on the part of plaintiff. Defendants’ evidence discloses the following:

A day or two prior to plaintiff’s arrest, which was on October 20, 1931, the property man at the theater was ordered to supply 22 or *668 25 bent wood chairs for a band act which was booked at the theater for the following week. He went to the property room under the stage to get the chairs and fonnd that all hut a few of them were gone. Not being able to find the lost chairs the property man reported the matter to Marchbanks. Marchbanks made a thorough search of the theater, including the plenum, chamber, but he could not find the lost chairs. He then reported the matter to the defendant, Lehman, who instructed him to investigate thoroughly and see if he could locate the chairs. It appears that- one Sparks, an employee of a parking station opposite the stage entrance to the theater, had seen plaintiff and Williams loading the chairs into the trucks. Marchbanks talked with Sparks and reported' to Lehman that he knew where a part of the chairs had been taken. Whereupon, Lehman told him to report the matter to the police,, which was done. ■ Detective Frederick, of the Kansas City Police Department, immediately came to the theater and talked with Marchbanks, who took him to see Sparks. Frederick asked Sparks what he knew about the matter and the latter told him what he had seen. Whereupon, Frederick said to Sparks: “I will go out and get Bill Greaves” (the plaintiff). Plaintiff was without work and was at -home. Marchbanks gave Frederick his address and telephone number.

Frederick, testifying .for ’the defendant, stated that he called up plaintiff, saying that there might be an opening for work at the .Pantages Theater for him and asked him if he would be. at home, that he would like to come out and see him. Plaintiff agreed to wait for him.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 228, 229 Mo. App. 663, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greaves-v-kansas-city-junior-orpheum-moctapp-1935.