Hendrie v. Perkins

42 S.W.2d 502, 240 Ky. 366, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 6, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 502 (Hendrie v. Perkins) 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
Hendrie v. Perkins, 42 S.W.2d 502, 240 Ky. 366, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 404 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clay

Affirming.

W. S. Hendrie & Company, a corporation, was engaged in the jewelry business in Central City. W. S. Hendrie, who was also a stockholder, was the secretary-treasurer and general manager of the corporation. On or about December 19, 1927, Helen Perkins, a young unmarried woman, was employed by the corporation as a saleswoman and continued in its employment until about the 8th day of February, 1928. In the month of March, 19-28, W. S. Hendrie, acting for and on behalf of the corporation, made the necessary oath before the presiding judge of the county court of Muhlenberg county and obtained a warrant charging Miss Perkins with grand larceny. At her examining trial she was dismissed for want of sufficient proof. At the April, 1928, term of the Muhlenberg circuit court Hendrie went before the grand jury and procured the return of two indictments, one charging Miss Perkins with grand larceny, and the other with embezzlement. At her trial on the charge of embezzlement the court instructed the jury to find her “Not guilty.” Thereupon, upon motion of the commonwealth, the indictment for grand larceny was dismissed for want of proof and stricken from the docket. Thereafter Miss Perkins brought this action against the corporation and *368 W. S. Hendrie individually to recover damages for malicious prosecution. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in her favor against both Hendrie and the corporation for $5,800'. Hendrie alone appeals.

The defenses interposed were: (1) Probable cause; (2) absence of malice; (3) advice of counsel. Appellant insists that each of these defenses was made out, and that the court erred in not directing a verdict in his favor. A resume of the evidence will be necessary.

Briefly stated, the evidence on behalf of the defendant is as follows: Miss Perkins began working for the company on December 19, 1927, and remained there until about February 8, 1928. The only other assistants or employees were appellant’s wife and his relatives. In the storeroom was a cash register, and in a room in the rear was the safe. This safe was unlocked, and was accessible to all those in the store. According to appellant he discovered a shortage of $166, and later on other shortages, making a total of $355.16.' After the discovery he questioned appellee, who said, “I don’t know a darn thing about it,” and walked to the front of the house. She then gathered together her belongings and left. Appellant then consulted an attorney, and told him that there had been some systematic stealing going on in the store, and that the shortage amounted to $355.16, and asked the attorney how to proceed. Again on February 10, appellant went to his attorney and again related the facts in connection with the alleged shortage. The attorney then advised him to find out how much money appellee had spent while in his employ, and after some investigation he reported that, while earning a salary of $12 a week she had paid out the sum of $109. After obtaining this information he and his attorney came to the store and requested the appellee to come there. At this conference appellee was informed that another shortage had been discovered. Appellant’s attorney informed appellee that she was under suspicion, and might be arrested, and asked her if she had any money at the time she came to work for Hendrie & Company. She replied that she did not, and as a further ■evidence that she did not have any money she had three or four cold checks around town. When asked if she had paid all the checks on the sheet appellant had there, she admitted paying practically all of them. She further admitted that she had paid Ed Hughes $10 with which to buy a pint of prescription whisky. Later on appel *369 lant asked permission to talk to appellee’s father and mother and went to appellee’s home and laid before her father and mother all the facts in connection with the shortage, telling them that appellee was under suspicion. During the conversation between the attorney and appellee’s father, the father asked for time to make arrangements to replace the shortage. Appellee’s mother expressed astonishment, and complained that she had been compelled to stop her daughter from drawing on her account, saying that she had drawn a number of cold checks. There was further evidence that appellee, when questioned about the shortage, stated that she would rather work her finger nails off and pay it back. Appellant also consulted his attorney on other occasions.

According to appellee, appellant called her from the front of the store on the afternoon of February 8, 1928. Appellant, his wife, and brother-in-law, Herbert Son, were there. When appellee joined them, appellant told her there was a shortage' of $128 in the cash. She told them she did not know anything about it, and appellant kept insinuating that she got the money. Appellee then went back to her customers at the front of the store, worked an hour or two longer, had appellant give her a statement of her account, and left. On February 13, appellant phoned appellee to come to the store at once as he wanted to see her on a personal matter. On her arrival at the store, appellant, his attorney, and his brother-in-law, were in the back room. The attorney told appellee that he was representing the company, and that there was a shortage of $355.16. Appellee said to Mr. Hendrie, “Why, you told me the amount of the shortage was $128.00.” Hendrie replied that he checked up and found ‘ ‘ this other mistake. ’ ’ Appellant or his attorney then told appellee that they had a long list of accounts, cold checks, and other expenditures made by her while she worked at the store, amounting to $109, which was more than the amount she had received as salary for that period, and that if she did not pay the company the amount of the shortage she would probably be arrested the next day. When asked where she got the money to pay the accounts, appellee said, “From Mama.” They also threatened to arrest appellee if she did not pay the company $355.16 by the next morning. They then told her that they wanted to see her father and mother, and for her to bring them to the store at once. *370 She told them that her father was ill, and that he and her mother conld not come that afternoon, but if they wanted to see her parents she would bring them to the store at 10 o’clock the next morning. Appellant said that this did not suit him, and informed appellee that he and his attorney were going to her home to see her father and mother at once, and went to the telephone to call a taxi. She said it was not necessary to call a taxi; that if they1 were determined to go to the home of her parents she would take them in her car. On reaching the Perkins home, Mrs. Perkins asked why the parties had come. Appellee replied, “They are trying to pull a dirty deal.” When they were all assembled in the living room of the Perkins home, appellant’s attorney told Mr. and Mrs. Perkins that there was a shortage of $355.16 in the cash taken in at the jewelry store during the time their daughter worked there. He further demanded payment of this amount from Mr. Perkins, and threatened to have appellee arrested if he did not pay at once. During the conversation appellee was accused of spending $109' during the time of her employment, or a sum much larger than the salary she received, and of giving cold checks. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 502, 240 Ky. 366, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrie-v-perkins-kyctapphigh-1931.