Groda v. American Stores Company

173 A. 419, 315 Pa. 484, 94 A.L.R. 738, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 652
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 24, 1934
DocketAppeal, 25
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 173 A. 419 (Groda v. American Stores Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Groda v. American Stores Company, 173 A. 419, 315 Pa. 484, 94 A.L.R. 738, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 652 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

On Saturday night, November 24, 1928, a robbery of $875 in cash and of $223 in checks was perpetrated on the agents of the Hummelstown store of the American Stores Company. It was customary to deposit Saturday’s receipts, at a late hour, with a bank across the street. Previous to this robbery, the men who were assigned the duty of taking the deposit to the bank, left through the front door, but, in view of a rumor that the store was to be robbed, Groda, employed as meat manager by the American Stores Company, and Mr. Leedy, another employee, who were selected to take that day’s deposit to the bank, departed from the store by the rear door so as to make it appear that they had finished work and were going home. As they attempted to get into their car, they were surrounded by armed men who commanded them to drive into the country. They did so and when several miles away, the American Stores’ money was taken from them. They made their way back to town and Groda notified the state police of the robbery, *486 between 3:30 and 4 o’clock Sunday morning. Groda also reported the robbery to Brensinger, general superintendent of the American Stores Company for that district. Groda and Leedy were both questioned by the state police on Sunday night and for about six or seven hours Monday. On Tuesday they were taken by the state police to the district attorney’s office in Harrisburg, where, after questioning, information was made by Elmer L. Ludwig, manager of the Hummelstown store of the defendant company, charging both Groda and Leedy with the larceny of the above sum of money of the American Stores Company. There were certain circumstances which seemed to cast some suspicion on them, such as the one that none of their own week’s salary, just received, had been taken from them in the robbery and the fact that Groda had failed to keep an appointment that he had with the state police when they were investigating this crime. Groda and Leedy were arrested on warrants and in default of bail Groda was, on November 27, 1928, committed to the Dauphin County Jail, where he was confined four days until he was released on bail. When the case against the plaintiff was called before the alderman, it was dismissed for lack of evidence and the costs put upon the County of Dauphin. Later the perpetrators of this robbery were apprehended and it was found that Groda and Leedy were entirely innocent.

Groda sued the American Stores Company in trespass, alleging that Ludwig in making the criminal information against him “acted with the authority” of the defendant and that the “arrest was made at the instance of the defendant, by its agent, servant, or employee, maliciously and without reasonable and probable cause.” Defendant denied that Ludwig acted as its agent or within the scope of his authority, express or implied.

The case was tried and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,500. Defendant’s motions for judgment n. o. v. and for a new trial were both overruled. An appeal was taken.

*487 The trial judge submitted to the jury the question of the agency of Ludwig, the manager of the Hummelstown store, and of Brensinger, the district agent of the defendant company, to institute this criminal prosecution.

The tenth assignment of error is based on the court’s overruling defendant’s objection to the offer to prove that before making the information against Groda, Ludwig “consulted the highest authority of the American Stores Company within the Harrisburg District, namely Joseph Brensinger, the general superintendent of the American Stores Company......and that Mr. Brensinger told him to go ahead and make the informations, that they would stand back of him.”

The twelfth assignment of error is based on the court’s overruling defendant’s objection to the offer to prove by Ludwig “that before he made these informations against plaintiffs, he consulted Mr. Brensinger,” and that the latter “replied substantially, ‘Go ahead and do it, it is all right, we will stand back of you.’ ”

The seventeenth and eighteenth assignments of error were based on the charge of the court as to the company’s remaining silent and acquiescent “for a length of time with full knowledge of the facts” as to the criminal information against Groda.

The twenty-first assignment is based on the court’s affirming with qualifications plaintiff’s eleventh point for charge, being as follows: “If the jury find from the evidence that the general superintendent, Brensinger, reported to his superiors in Philadelphia, that the manager of the Hummelstown store had made an information against the plaintiffs, and the American Stores Company took no action pursuant to this information to disavow the action of the manager of its store, this failure to act amounted to a ratification of the manager’s action.”

The twenty-second assignment of error is based on the court’s refusing defendant’s ninth point, reading as follows : “There is no evidence in this case to show that the *488 defendant company ratified the acts of Ludwig in bringing prosecutions against the plaintiffs.”

All these assignments of error are overruled. There was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the question of whether or not the act of Ludwig in making these in-formations was the act of the defendant company. This court, in an opinion by Mr. Justice Schaffer in Farneth v. Commercial Credit Co., 313 Pa. 433, 440, 169 A. 89, said: “Where a corporation has intrusted a manager with the general supervision of a particular branch of its business, it invests with him the power of a general agent, coextensive with the business intrusted to his care, and is bound by his contracts on its behalf made within the apparent scope of his authority: Empire Implement Mfg. Co. v. Hench, 219 Pa. 135 [67 A. 995]. Where the authority of such an agent is not limited in writing, the scope of the agency is a question for the jury: Edwards & Strong v. Power Gasoline Co., 109 Pa. Superior Ct. 252 [167 A. 487].”

The twenty-third assignment of error is based on the charge of the court to the jury as follows: “The burden is on the plaintiff to prove, first, that the prosecutor had no probable cause upon which to found the prosecution; second, that he was actuated by malice. If the plaintiff’s evidence shows probable cause, that would be the end of the case. Where the defendant has been discharged in a criminal case, and that is the evidence here, the defendants in the criminal cases were discharged, then the burden of proof shifts from the plaintiffs to the defendant; the defendant is then bound to make out a case of probable cause, unless the plaintiff’s evidence has already made it out. If the defendant shows probable cause, and the plaintiff’s evidence has not shown it, that is sufficient for the defendant’s protection.”

In McCarthy v. De Armit, 99 Pa. 63, this court said: “Probable cause does not depend on the state of the case in point of fact, but upon the honest and reasonable belief of the party prosecuting.” In Seibert v. Price, 5 W. *489 & S.

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Bluebook (online)
173 A. 419, 315 Pa. 484, 94 A.L.R. 738, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groda-v-american-stores-company-pa-1934.