James v. Southwestern Insurance Company

1960 OK 164, 354 P.2d 408, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 421
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 6, 1960
Docket38444
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1960 OK 164 (James v. Southwestern Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. Southwestern Insurance Company, 1960 OK 164, 354 P.2d 408, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 421 (Okla. 1960).

Opinions

JOHNSON, Justice.

Alfred James sued the Southwestern Insurance Company, a corporation, National Automobile Theft Bureau, a national association, M. L. Rear, James Dozier and Chester Stringer, in the District Court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, for damages that he allegedly suffered by reason of his false arrest and false imprisonment by the defendants.

A jury was empaneled, and the plaintiff adduced his evidence and rested. The defendants (each) interposed demurrers thereto on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants. The demurrers were sustained, and the action was dismissed, resulting in this appeal.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged in substance that the defendants, without making full disclosure of all the facts to the County Attorney of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, caused his arrest and imprisonment by filing with the county attorney an affidavit and preliminary information, sworn to by Chester V. Stringer, charging the plaintiff with the crime of setting fire to and burning a certain described automobile; that by reason of such false charge caused a warrant to issue for the arrest of plaintiff; that in so doing the defendants unlawfully, maliciously and without probable cause caused his arrest and imprisonment and the eventual district court jury trial wherein he was acquitted; that the defendants had made a purported investigation of the burning of the automobile and had represented themselves as being members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and coerced and intimidated plaintiff into signing a confession of the crime which he wouldn’t have signed had he been advised of his constitutional rights, all of which resulted in the plaintiff’s alleged damages.

Defendants denied generally all the allegations. Defendant Stringer admitted that he was an employee of the Department of Public Safety of the State of Oklahoma, and that he signed an affidavit and complaint against the plaintiff charging him with violation of Title 21 O.S.1951 § 1764, but not until after the plaintiff had signed a confession of the crime; that they did not use force, fear or durress to get him to sign the confession, and that the defendant did not cause a warrant to be issued for the [410]*410arrest of the plaintiff maliciously, unlawfully or without just cause; that he was not at any time an agent or acted as such for the defendant Southwestern Insurance Company.

The confession referred to in the foregoing pleadings, and hereinafter referred to in the résumé of the evidence, reads as follows:

“August 2, 1955
“Sheriffs Office
“Tulsa, Oklahoma
“I, Alfred James, am 18 years of age, and I live at Tahlequah, Oklahoma. I am making this statement of my own free will and accord, without any threats or promises being made to me, and the statement is being made to Chester Stringer, who has identified himself to me as an Agent for the Oklahoma Bureau of Investigation. I have been advised that I do not have to make this statement and that if I do, it can be used against me in any prosecution or proceedings.
“In April of 1955 I purchased a 1952 Ford Tudor from the Campbell Motor Co. of Tahlequah, Oklahoma. I paid $1400.00 or a little more after the carrying charges and insurance was added on. I traded in a 1940 Ford and mortgaged eight cows. My payments were a little over $81.00 per month on the car. I made three payments and was not behind at the time of the fire.
“After getting married I decided to get rid of this car and purchase a cheaper one and on Sunday, July 17, 1955, I decided to take the car out and burn it. I left our apartment in Tulsa by myself about 10 o’clock and drove southeast of Tulsa to a spot that looked deserted and set the seat covers on fire with a match. This was a one mile east and a little south of Sontag’s Grocery Store at 21st and Memorial Road. After the fire got going good a man came along in a pickup truck. I don’t know his name but he works at the fire station in Waggoner. He stopped and we watched the car burn and then he pushed it out of the road with his truck and then we came into Tulsa and called the Highway Patrol and then he took me home. I never did tell my wife that this fire was not an accident.
“I now wish to state that the statement given to Mr. Dozier who I know to be an adjuster was untrue, and this statement is the truth.
“Witness /s/ Chester Stringer
“Witness /s/ M. L. Rear
“I have read the above and it is true
/s/ Alfred James”
■Note: The statement “I have read the above and it is true” is admittedly the handwriting of the plaintiff.

In stating the nature of the action on plaintiff in error’s brief as required by rule of this Court, the action was designated “Action for false arrest and false imprisonment,” and the assignments of error are presented and argued under the one heading:

“Did plaintiff prove prima facie that he was arrested falsely and was thereafter falsely imprisoned?”

Though side issues or factors which tend to impose liability for malicious prosecution are injected into the case, we shall confine our discussion and decision to the plaintiff’s single' issue of whether he proved prima facie that he was falsely arrested and falsely imprisoned.

The evidence discloses that in March or April of 1955 plaintiff purchased a 1952 Ford automobile; that on July 17, 1955, in the daytime, while driving the Ford automobile on a highway near Tulsa, he noticed the car was on fire, and that Mr. Dale, one of his witnesses, but who at the time of the fire was a stranger to him, joined him while the car was burning. He left the car at the scene where it had burned and presumably the highway patrol moved the car to Paul’s Garage in Tulsa; that he was not behind in the payments on the car at the time of the fire; that the insurance company up to the time of the trial had not [411]*411paid the insurance claim incurred by reason of the burned automobile.

He further testified that he met Mr. Dozier for the first time on August 22, 1955, at Chic Norton Buick Company in Tulsa in response to a note that Mr. Dozier had left with his mother requesting the meeting; that he met Mr. Dozier, who was the agent for Southwestern Insurance Company, about 9:30 a. m.; that they talked about an hour; that he was told by Mr. Dozier that two FBI men wanted to talk to him; that Mr. Dozier introduced him to Chester Stringer and M. L. Rear, following Dozier’s comment regarding them being members of the FBI; that he talked with these three men until approximately eleven o’clock, when he left with Rear and Stringer in their car and went to Paul’s Garage where the burned car was inspected, and then they started to the place on the highway where the automobile was burned. His further testimony. was that Rear and Stringer threatened him and his wife with prison terms, and that he was nervous and scared and unadvised, and that he confessed to burning the automobile, whereupon they took him to the county attorney’s office where he talked to Mr. Simms, an assistant county attorney, and told him that his confession was true, and he signed the written confession in the presence of the county attorney.

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James v. Southwestern Insurance Company
1960 OK 164 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
1960 OK 164, 354 P.2d 408, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-southwestern-insurance-company-okla-1960.