Hallen v. Montgomery Ward Co. Inc.

281 N.W. 291, 203 Minn. 349, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 719
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 9, 1938
DocketNo. 31,687.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 281 N.W. 291 (Hallen v. Montgomery Ward Co. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hallen v. Montgomery Ward Co. Inc., 281 N.W. 291, 203 Minn. 349, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 719 (Mich. 1938).

Opinions

Holt, Justice.

In this action for false arrest and malicious prosecution plaintiff had a verdict for $3,985. Defendants moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial. The court denied judgment but granted a new trial unless plaintiff consented to reduce the verdict to $2,000. Plaintiff consented, and defendants appeal.

Plaintiff’s testimony, virtually Avliolly uncorroborated, made a case for the jury. But a careful consideration of the whole record is so convincing that defendants proved not only probable cause, but good cause, for plaintiff’s apprehension and prosecution for petit larceny that in the interest of justice there should be a new trial. It is therefore necessary to state more of the purport of the testimony than is desirable in a decision.

Plaintiff’s story is in short this: In the afternoon of Saturday, February 27, 1937, she left her home in St. Paul, Minnesota, located about three-fourths of a mile south from the retail department store of Montgomery Ward & Company, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Ward’s store, to look at shoes advertised by said store in the local paper the evening before. She brought along a black straw hat purchased about two Aveeks before at the Dotty Dunn Hat Store, downtOAvn, for the purpose of exchanging it, after looking at the shoes. On the Avay to Ward’s store she stopped four blocks from her home, at the National Tea Store on Dayton and Snelling avenues, and purchased tAvo cans of Log Cabin syrup. She carried her hat in a paper bag and put the syrup cans in another paper bag, Avalked to Ward’s store, and on the first floor looked at the shoes advertised. They did not suit her. She looked at some dresses and aprons at a near-by counter, then went to the basement, bought for ten cents a can of Three-In-One oil, and placed it in the bag *351 with the syrup cans. On the way up from the basement she stopped at the candy counter and bought 15 cents worth of candy bars, and, having concluded not to go to town to exchange her hat, she turned to go home by the south or rear entrance of Ward’s store, and was arrested in the doorway by defendant Mrs. Jensen, the private detective of Ward’s store, and her purse and paper bags taken, and she was taken to the office of Mr. Drew, the assistant chief of the detectives of Ward’s on the third floor, where the contents of the paper bags were emptied on a table, and she was accused of having taken the hat, the syrup cans, and the oil can from the store. After some questions, police officers with a squad car were called. Plaintiff denied the accusation, told them where she had bought the hat and cans of syrup, and asked them to verify that as well as that she had paid the clerk for the can of oil. She says they refused, said she was crazy, that she could explain to the judge of the police court. The paper bags and the articles mentioned were put in a large shopping bag by Mr. Drew and turned over to the police officers, who took the same and plaintiff to the city lockup. Plaintiff was placed in jail and charged in the municipal court Monday morning with petit larceny. She pleaded not guilty, was released on $100 bail furnished by her husband, and the trial set for March i, 1937. On the trial before the court, without a jury, Mrs. Jensen and Mr. Drew were called as witnesses for the state, and plaintiff and Mr. Nash, the clerk at the National Tea, who had sold her two cans of Log Cabin syrup, testified in defense. She was acquitted. It must be conceded that plaintiff made a prima jade case.

However, a consideration of the whole record herein has convinced a majority of the court that defendants so overwhelmingly proved probable cause for the detention and prosecution of plaintiff for petit larceny that a new trial should have been granted rather than an attempt made to mitigate the wrong of an excessive verdict by cutting it in tivo. It is common knowledge that large department stores suffer so from the depredations of shoplifters that private detectives are necessary for protection. Mrs. Jensen and Mr. Drew were so employed. But surely there is as much need to scrutinize *352 the testimony of plaintiff as one vitally interested as that of Mrs.Jensen or Mr. Drew. The articles involved in the charge were a black straw hat, two cans of Log Cabin syrup, a ten-cent can of oil, and a kettle or pan lid. Plaintiff denied that the lid was in her bags; but the evidence is conclusive that it ivas on the table in Drew’s office, ivas an exhibit at the criminal trial as well as on this trial. All the articles mentioned were received as exhibits in both trials. Plaintiff at this trial vehemently claims that the black straw hat in the paper bag taken from her when apprehended is not the one Drew placed in the shopping bag delivered to the police officers; but she makes no claim that there was any substitution of the cans of syrup. The same attorney who now represents plaintiff defended her in the criminal trial, and in this trial Mr. Rumble represented defendants. Both attorneys displayed great skill and zeal for their clients, but neither one has even suggested that the other has contrived or been cognizant of any attempt to substitute any other article for any of the ones in plaintiff’s paper bags at the time of her apprehension by Mrs. Jensen. In fact the professional standing of both counsel is such that it is unthinkable that either one would tolerate any trick or scheme by which there was a substitution or change of any article or exhibit involved in these trials.

This is a brief statement of the salient points of defendants’ evidence. Mrs. Jensen testified that she first noticed plaintiff in the shoe department of Ward’s store on the first floor, holding an open paper bag in front of her with the left hand, her purse being held under her left arm, and picking up and handling shoes with the right while continuously looking all around. Mrs. Jensen concluded to shadoiv her and spoke to Miss Ralstad in charge of the adjoining notion counter; that she, Mrs. Jensen, followed plaintiff without coming too near, observed her actions at the notion counter, then at the near-by millinery department, Avhere plaintiff began to look at hats, picking them up and examining them, taking off her oavu and trying one on, then taking it off and putting on her oAvn; she then picked up the black straAv hat now received in evidence, carried *353 it in her hand with the paper hag, walked toAvard the wall of the department, looking around, turned at the dress rack and around the same, and, as she so did, she put the hat in the bag, closed the bag, and went to where the suede jackets Avere displayed. Mrs. Jensen spoke to Miss Bruels, a salesAvoman in that department. Mrs. Jensen testified that she srav plaintiff fumbling with her hands in front of her, then came back, started for the house-dress department, having another paper bag that looked empty in her right hand, holding in her left the bag in which she had placed the hat; that after looking at some articles there plaintiff walked toAvard the lobby and then to the rear entrance. Mrs. Jensen then spoke to Mr. McCaul and Mr. Fishbak in charge of the refrigerator department, stating that plaintiff had taken a hat and she, Mrs. Jensen, Avanted their help — since her instructions are not to arrest a shoplifter in the store, but wait until outside the door. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 291, 203 Minn. 349, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hallen-v-montgomery-ward-co-inc-minn-1938.