JC Penney Co., Inc. v. Cox

148 So. 2d 679, 246 Miss. 1, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 409
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1963
Docket42501
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 148 So. 2d 679 (JC Penney Co., Inc. v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JC Penney Co., Inc. v. Cox, 148 So. 2d 679, 246 Miss. 1, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 409 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

*4 McElroy, J.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Forrest County, Mississippi, from a judgment in favor of the appellee against the appellant in the sum of $2,000.

This suit upon which the judgment was awarded was based upon allegations by the appellee to the effect that the assistant manager of the appellant’s store in Hat-tiesburg, while acting under such employment and within the scope of his authority, did falsely, publicly, and maliciously accuse the appellee of having stolen from the appellant corporation a jar of deodorant or some other similar article; that the appellee was subject to false arrest, detention, imprisonment, search of her person and her possession by the said assistant manager of the appellant corporation, who was at the time acting in the scope of his employment; and that the appellee was subjected to great indignities, humiliation, and disgrace by being compelled to empty the contents of her purse and a paper sack which she was carrying, on the inside steps of the said building in full view of all the clerks and other employees of the appellant’s store, as well as many shoppers who were in the vicinity at that time.

In the appellant’s answer they admit that the appellee did not steal a jar of deodorant or anything else from the appellant; that all of that had and done by the defendants or its agents and employees on the occasion complained of were had and done in good faith and upon reasonable grounds therefor under the laws of Mississippi, and because thereof the plaintiff is entitled to *5 recover nothing whatsoever from the defendant. Thns their defense is that the management of the store is privileged under and by the 1958 Laws of Mississippi, which is Chapter 268 of the General Laws, and rely on Section 4 thereof, which is as follows:

“Section 4. If any person shall commit or attempt to commit the offense of shoplifting, as defined herein, or if any person shall willfully conceal npon his person or otherwise any nnpnrchased goods, wares or merchandise held or owned by any store or mercantile establishment, the merchant or any employee thereof or any peace or police officer, acting in good faith and npon probable canse based upon reasonable grounds therefor, may question such person, in a reasonable manner for the purpose of ascertaining- whether or not such person is guilty of shoplifting as defined herein. Such questioning of a person by a merchant, merchant’s employee or peace or police officer shall not render such merchant, merchant’s employee or peace or police officer civilly liable for slander, false arrest, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, unlawful detention or otherwise in any case where such merchant, merchant’s employee or peace or police officer acts in good faith and upon reasonable grounds to believe that the person questioned is committing or attempting to commit the crime of shoplifting as defined in this act.” Miss. Laws of 1958, Ch. 268 Sec. 4, now Sec. 2374-04, Code 1942.

This same act defines shoplifting which is nothing-more than the statutory or common law petty larceny or larceny in a store.

The facts are that Mrs. Della Cox on April 1, 1961 was regularly employed as a baby-sitter. She had come to Hattiesburg to visit her sister by way of Trailway. She arrived around two o’clock and went immediately to Denney’s store to do some shopping. As she came in front she looked over at the heads, and they had cosmetics and lipsticks. She had a pair of shoes in-a *6 paper bag; she was going to buy some material when she saw the display of deodorants and lipsticks, and she stopped, thinking that it was a sale and she would find a bargain. This was at the front of the store. Then Mr. Maduzia, the assistant manager, came up and caught the appellee by the arm and demanded her to pay him for the deodorant that she had in a paper bag and in her purse. This all occurred within the store building, on the steps about three steps up, in view of all the sales people and customers in the store. He demanded that she open her purse and then the bag and display everything there on the steps, which she did, and demanded that she pay for what she had in the bag that didn’t belong to her. “He just told me to pay for it and to let him see what I had, first in the purse and then in the bag. I was never so humiliated in my life. I had never stolen anything and I just wanted to cry and just went all to pieces. It really made me sick.” She had never been accused before of being a shoplifter. After the manager was satisfied that she didn’t have what he was looking for, he then admitted that he had made a mistake.

No one testified that they saw the appellee take anything. The only testimony was to the effect that they suspected that something had been possibly taken, and that Mrs. Cox was the person pointed out to the manager. One of the salesladies said she acted a little suspicious when she walked up to her to try to sell her something, and stated that some other person in the store had told her, “I think she put something in her bag.” She did not see Mrs. Cox take anything, and stated, “I told her I thought that she took something.” All this was related to another clerk in the store who was the one who conveyed the report to the manager. The second saleslady made this report to the manager.

The assignment of error assigned that the trial court should have sustained the motion for a directed verdict *7 and given the requested peremptory instruction that the defendant was entitled to judgment under the pleadings and proof that the trial court improperly interpreted Section 4 of Chapter 268, Laws of 1958, as disclosed by the instruction refused to the appellant and granted appellee.

The question before the court is whether, under Chapter 268 above, the manager of the store, in taking hold of the appellee’s arm and stopping her on the stairway and proceeding to accuse her in a voice heard by the occupants of the store and the salespeople of having stolen a jar of deodorant or some similar article from the counter, was justified in what he did.

We do not believe that he was. We believe from the evidence the jury was warranted in finding that the qualified privilege, claimed by the defendant through his employee, relating to plaintiff had been exceeded.

Historically, in law of libel and slander, a showing of malice on the part of the communicator was considered an essential element of the plaintiff’s cause of action, but the courts developed a fiction that the speaking of certain words raises a presumption of malice on the part of the speaker. However, a person who publishes words which would otherwise be defamatory may be excused from liability because of privilege. There are two types of privileges ■ — ■ absolute' and qualified or conditional. If an absolute privilege is shown it is generally held that the communicator may not be liable for the words spoken whether maliciously or not, but if a conditional or qualified privilege is relied on by the speaker, such privilege may be exceeded or abused so that its protection may be lost.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 So. 2d 679, 246 Miss. 1, 1963 Miss. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jc-penney-co-inc-v-cox-miss-1963.