Hepworth v. Covey Bros. Amusement Co.

91 P.2d 507, 97 Utah 205, 1939 Utah LEXIS 58
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1939
DocketNo. 6051.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 507 (Hepworth v. Covey Bros. Amusement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hepworth v. Covey Bros. Amusement Co., 91 P.2d 507, 97 Utah 205, 1939 Utah LEXIS 58 (Utah 1939).

Opinion

PRATT, Justice.

James Hepworth was a paid guest at a public dance. The ballroom was owned and operated by the Covey Brothers Amusement Company. Hepworth sued the Company for damages arising out of false imprisonment. He recovered a verdict of $1,000. On motion for a new trial the lower court gave him the choice of accepting a $500 judgment, or *208 submitting to the new trial. He accepted the $500 judgment. The Amusement Company has appealed. There is substantial evidence in the case to support the following:

At the dance, Hepworth met two friends, Abel and Peck, the latter a minor. While they were sitting in the lounge, Peck got up, walked approximately fifteen feet away, took a drink out of a bottle, and then came back to the seat. Two floorwalkers of the Company, one a city police officer on special duty and in uniform, came up to them. The officer reached into Peck's pocket, took the bottle, then started away with Peck. Suddenly he stopped, came back, and using the expression: “Well, just to make sure we haven’t made any mistake about this,” felt over the pockets of Hepworth and Abel. Finding nothing, he and the other floorwalker left the ballroom with Peck. Several minutes later, the two returned and the officer asked whose liquor it was. Hepworth and Abel disclaimed any knowledge of it. The officer then said: “You come down stairs with us and we will see whose it is.” Hepworth remonstrated. The officer then said: “If you would answer a civil question you would not have to go.” He continued: “Let’s take a walk.” The four of them crossed the dance floor walking four abreast for a while, then, due to the crowd of dancers, they walked in a column of twos, Hepworth and Abel in the front, finally resuming the four abreast postion until they entered a little room near the entrance. Here the following entry was made as to Hep-worth : “Name: James Hepworth; Address: 249 Orchard; Offense: With fellows who had bottle; Location: N. E. corner; Date: 1/18/37; Age: 26; Remarks: Peck and Abel; Action Taken: Permitted to stay; Officers: Perry, Ralph.” The officer then said: “We are booking you both for possession of liquor and if we have any more trouble, we will take you up and book you at the police station.” Again Hep-worth remonstrated about his treatment. The officer replied : “You should be more choosey about your company.”

And upon the question of damages, the following facts:

*209 Hepworth was a student at the University of Utah and also an assistant instructor in the Modern Language Department. He attended the dance expecting to meet a young lady, but not in anticipation of meeting either Peck or Abel. He and the young lady met and danced together. She saw him crossing the floor with the officers and others. Hepworth claimed he suffered considerable embarrassment in view of the fact that some of his students were present and it became known about the University that he had been arrested. One student in particular he remembered seeing there, but could not give his name. One young lady, with whom he sought a dance, informed him that her dances were all taken. Hepworth attributed this to the incident. The officers claimed Hepworth had liquor on his breath; the young lady, with whom he danced, contended that he did not. Hepworth suffered no loss so far as his position in the Modern Language Department of the University was concerned.

Upon the motion for a new trial, affidavits were submitted upon the following alleged errors: One of the jurors, a lady, was accused of having been influenced in her verdict against the Company by her expressed antagonism to one of the Company counsel; and that the verdict was obtained by averaging the amounts written on secret ballots. Counter-affidavits were filed upon the last point, but not on the first.

Appellant groups its many assignments of error as follows:

(1) There is no evidence from which as a matter of law it can be adduced that the defendant was guilty of unlawful arrest or false imprisonment;

(2) No damage resulted from the acts of the defendant or its agents;

(3) The defendant is entitled to a trial by qualified jurors free from bias and prejudice; and

(4) The verdict is not sustained by the evidence but based on passion and prejudice, and, as a matter of law, the motion for a new trial should have been granted.

*210 We wish to invite attention to a distinction in the law which we believe has been confused in the briefs. False arrest may be committed only by one who has legal authority to arrest or who has pretended legal authority to arrest. False imprisonment may be committed by anyone who imprisons without legal right. One who commits a false arrest of another may be liable in damages for false imprisonment, but from this we must not reason that if there is a failure of proof of false arrest, of necessity there is a failure of proof of false imprisonment. False arrest is merely one means of committing a false imprisonment. False imprisonment may be committed without any thought of attempting an arrest.

“Any exercise of force, or express or implied threat of force, by which in fact the other person is deprived of his liberty, compelled to remain where he does not wish to remain or to go where he does not wish to go, is an imprisonment. * * * The essential thing is the restraint of the person. * * * If the words or conduct are such as to induce a reasonable apprehension of force, and the means of coercion are at hand, a person may be as effectually restrained and deprived of liberty as by prison bars. * * *” 11 R. C. L. 793, 794, sec 5.

That such restraint may occur wrongfully without regard to the thought of making an arrest, we cite merely the cases of Whittaker v. Sanford, 110 Me. 77, 85 A. 399, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 1202; and Salisbury v. Poulson, 51 Utah 552, 172 P. 315. In the former, a yacht captain would not let a woman off the yacht; in the latter, a dentist would not let his client out of the office until her bill was paid.

The lower court in its instruction number 4, correctly defined false imprisonment, using practically the wording we have quoted from R. C. L. above. Defendant however, in its requests for instructions emphasizes the elements of what constitutes an arrest. The implication is: That if the officer did not intend to arrest Hepworth, then the latter is not entitled to recover. We have no quarrel with the ruling of the case of State v. Beekendorf, 79 Utah 360, 10 P. 2d 1073, in its definition of an arrest; but we do *211 reject any thought that whether or not the officer intended to make an arrest governs this case. It is more than likely that Hepworth was entirely ignorant of the necessary elements of making an arrest. If, however, the officer’s acts and words were such as to reasonably create in Hepworth’s mind the belief of a necessity of conforming to those demands or suffer the consequences, and Hepworth conformed rather than to chance the consequences, he was restrained of his liberty. Call the acts and words of the officer what you may — an arrest or not — the restraint was just as effective.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 507, 97 Utah 205, 1939 Utah LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hepworth-v-covey-bros-amusement-co-utah-1939.