Judy Hruska v. Severance Specialty, Inc.

498 F.2d 796, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8080
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 1974
Docket73-1884
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 498 F.2d 796 (Judy Hruska v. Severance Specialty, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Judy Hruska v. Severance Specialty, Inc., 498 F.2d 796, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8080 (6th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

WEICK, Circuit Judge.

Severance Specialty, Inc. [Severance] appealed from a judgment entered upon *797 a jury verdict in the District Court awarding $40,000 to plaintiff, Judy Hruska, in her action for malicious prosecution.

Severance was responsible for having the plaintiff prosecuted for shoplifting. After her acquittal of charges of larceny in the state court, she filed suit against Severance in the District Court to recover $250,000 damages.

Jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Mrs. Hruska was a resident of Florida when she filed the suit, and Severance was an Ohio corporation. The case is governed by Ohio law.

On May 2, 1971 Mrs. Hruska was in a retail dress store operated by defendant in Severance Center at the Westgate Shopping Center in Fairview Park, a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. The name of this particular store was “William Kitt”. Plaintiff was accompanied by her son, then five years of age.

Plaintiff had driven to the shopping center in her automobile and was having some mechanical work done on the car while she shopped. She testified that before entering defendant’s store she had gone to Kresge’s and purchased a pair of mittens for her son. She testified that she placed these mittens in a Higbee’s shopping bag which was an ordinary white paper shopping bag with pink and red flowers on it. After leaving Kresge’s store plaintiff and her son spent a few minutes in a pet shop before entering defendant’s store.

While in the Severance store plaintiff was looking at dresses in one area of the store while her son was seated on a chair in another nearby area, with her shopping bag and purse on the chair beside him.

As plaintiff and her son were leaving the store, a sensomatic device was activated. This is an electronic device which activates a warning system when that device is being carried out of the store. The store had placed this device on all items of merchandise; this device would be removed from the merchandise by the sales clerk only when the item was purchased.

When the sensomatic device was activated the store manager, Robert Gould, was notified immediately and he confronted plaintiff. He asked if she had a device on her person, and she replied that she did not think so. With her permission Gould looked in her shopping bag and found a size 10 multicolored dress with jeweled belt, which retailed for $130; the dress had not been purchased, and had thereon the sensomatic device which activated the warning system. He found nothing else in the bag. 1

The store manager asked plaintiff to go to the back of the store with him; she complied with his request, taking her son with her. Gould immediately called the Fairview Park police station; a policeman responded, and took Mrs. Hruska to the station for questioning. Gould did not interrogate Mrs. Hruska additionally about the incident before he called the police.

During the interrogation by the police at the police station plaintiff spelled her name “Ruska,” and gave them “phony addresses” instead of her correct address. The police asked for her driver’s license or for other identification, and she told them that she did not have a driver’s license with her; and that she had gone to the shopping center on the bus. She later told the police the truth. 2 *798 Her explanation for these initial false statements was that she was “shook up” since she had never before been in such a situation. She also said that she told the police of the circumstances involving her divorce, custody of her children, and “the various factors that led me at that particular moment to distort the truth.” (App. p. 27). Plaintiff was released on a $500 personal bond.

The store manager Gould signed an affidavit charging the plaintiff with larceny, which affidavit was filed in Rocky River Municipal Court, where a preliminary hearing was conducted.

At the hearing the Municipal Judge heard witnesses offered by the prosecution and also by Mrs. Hruska who was represented by counsel. At the conclusion of the hearing the Municipal Judge found probable cause and bound Mrs. Hruska over to the Grand Jury of Cuyahoga County, which indicted her for larceny of the dress. In a trial before a Judge without a jury she was acquitted.

Attorney Charles Clarke, who represented Mrs. Hruska in connection with the criminal proceedings against her, contacted Edgar Bruml, President of Severance, in an effort to persuade him to drop the charges against her while the case was pending in the Municipal Court. Mr. Clarke requested Mr. Bruml to advise him the name of the company’s attorney so that he might discuss the case with him. Mr. Bruml informed Mr. Clarke that his company was represented by Albert Borowitz. Mr. Clarke then telephoned Mr. Borowitz, who testified in part as to the conversation as follows:

A After introducing himself — and by the way, I did not know Mr. Clarke before that call — he told me that he represented Mrs. Hruska, that she had been apprehended at the Westgate Shopping Center, that she had been accused of taking a dress which retailed at about $130, that the store manager who had spoken to the police in connection with the apprehension was Mr. Gould, that the case was before the Rocky River Municipal Court.
He hold me that he had spoken to Mr. Bruml and told Mr. Bruml of his view, that is, Mr. Clarke’s view that Mrs. Hruska had been apprehended in error, and that he had asked Mr. Bruml whether he would give Mr. Clarke the name of his lawyer so that Mr. Clarke could contact Mr. Bruml’s lawyer.
Mr. Bruml agreed. Mr. Clarke called me, and the substance of his message, other than introducing me to the facts of the case, was to suggest and request that I talk to Mr. Bruml, that I look into the facts, and that I advise my client, in light of what I found the facts were.
Q Well, following that telephone call from Mr. Clarke, what did you do?
A I consulted one of my partners, Harry Nester, who is a trial lawyer, as I am not. And I gave him this slip on which I sketched these few words from Mr. Clarke.
I explained what the substance of the call was, and I asked him to contact the staff of Severance Specialty to make inquiry into the incident.
Q Did you have any further contact with this entire incident?
A Yes. Mr. Nester, after making his calls, consulted with me again, and it was our joint conclusion that the client had proceeded in the matter in good faith, that it had a reasonable basis for having *799 had a warrant sworn out, and that there was no legal basis to advise the client to interfere with the course of the prosecution. (Tr. pp. 345-347).

Mr. Clarke called Mr. Borowitz again after his client had been indicted by the Grand Jury. Mr. Borowitz testified:

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Bluebook (online)
498 F.2d 796, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judy-hruska-v-severance-specialty-inc-ca6-1974.