Lee v. Jones

116 A. 201, 44 R.I. 151, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 A. 201 (Lee v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Jones, 116 A. 201, 44 R.I. 151, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 16 (R.I. 1922).

Opinion

Stearns, J.

This is an action of trespass for false imprisonment in which are joined counts in trespass on the *153 case for malicious prosecution. The defendant Everett E.. Jones pleaded the general issue to ■ each count. The defendant John R. Wilcox, who is the Sheriff of Washington. County, to the counts for false imprisonment, pleaded justification in that the arrest complained of was made by him in his official capacity on a valid warrant commanding the arrest of the plaintiff, and the general issue to the counts-for malicious prosecution.

The case was tried before a jury and at the conclusion of the testimony the trial justice, on motion of the defendants,, directed a verdict for the defendants. Plaintiff’s exception to this action of the trial justice is the main question, raised by his bill of exceptions. It is conceded that the action of the trial justice was correct in directing a verdict-in favor of the defendant Oliver Jones.

In the summer of 1918 a check dated July 11, 1918, drawn by the Coast Fish Co. Inc., of New York City, for $45.25, payable to Elmer Babcock,-a resident of Wakefield, R. I., was received by mail at the Post Office in Wakefield and by mistake the letter, enclosing the check, which was addressed to Elmer Babcock was deposited in the Post Office box of one Elmer E. Babcock, a, nephew of the payee.

Elmer E. Babcock, who knew that the check did not belong to him, indorsed the check as follows, “Elmer Babcock,” and, as he admitted, thereby committed a forgery. He testified that he held the check for a short time, but does not know just how long, and then cashed it at the store of defendant Everett E. Jones in Wakefield, who was doing business under the name and style of “Jones Bros.” Everett E. Jones testified that he knew nothing of the cashing of this check until late in the fall, when he was notified by the Wakefield Trust Co., with whom the check had been deposited for collection, that the indorsement was forged; he paid the amount of the check to the Trust Co. and some six weeks later the check was returned to him. Jones had no record in his store of the date of the cashing of the check but upon inquiry he learned from one of his *154 -clerks that, although she could not tell the time definitely, ;she thought she remembered cashing the' check for the plaintiff Owen Lee. Plaintiff was a customer of Jones and had cashed checks at different times at the store. On or about July 15th plaintiff made a purchase at the store, in payment for which it is claimed a check was cashed for him. After receiving the check from the bank Jones turned the -check over to Sheriff Wilcox on December 8th and the latter :at once began an investigation of the case. At the request -of the Sheriff, Jones procured and gave to the Sheriff a sample of the plaintiff’s handwriting in which the words “Elmer Babcock” appeared. At this time Jones did not know when the check had been cashed, but supposed from the date on the check that it had been cashed at his store a few days after the date of the check. He did not tell the .Sheriff the' date when it was cashed' and does not remember whether the Sheriff asked in regard to this. Subsequently it was discovered from the Trust Co. that the check was ■deposited on Monday, August 26th, and Jones from that fact thought the check must have been cashed in his store on the preceding Saturday, the 24th of August. Plaintiff, who had been living with an aunt in Wakefield, after the 18th of July went to live for a few days with his uncle Elmer Babcock. On the 22d of July, plaintiff was mustered into the United States Army under the Selective Service act, at East Greenwich, and on the following day he went to an •army camp on Long Island. He was honorably discharged from the service on December 13th and arrived home in Wakefield, December. 14. He. was in Wakefield on leave a part of two days in early November.

*156 (1) *154 Sheriff Wilcox testified that Jones told him he thought the check was cashed about the 14th or 15th of July, judging •from the date of the check and also because plaintiff had bought clothes in his store about the 15th or 16th of July. After interviewing the clerks in Jones’s store, the Sheriff interviewed the postmaster and his assistant. From them he learned that plaintiff’s mail had been regularly placed in *155 the box of his uncle, Elmer Babcock, from whence all of the mail in the box was taken at different times by plaintiff or Babcock’s children; that in the fall of 1918 the postmaster had been directed by Mrs. Elmer Babcock not to deliver .any more of their mail to any one except on written order. The Sheriff submitted the check and specimens of plaintiff’s handwriting to various people, including the postmaster and the teller of the Trust Co. All agreed that the handwriting was the same on each exhibit. The Sheriff then stated the results of his investigation and submitted the writings to a friend, a captain of police in the city of Providence, who had had much experience in criminal cases and also to the justice ■of the local district court who was a lawyer. By each' of them he was advised that the case was a proper oné’to be brought against the plaintiff and that the handwriting of ■each exhibit was made by the same person. The Sheriff then consulted his attorney in Westerly, a practicing lawyer .■of experience and of good standing in his profession. The .Sheriff testified that he stated to his attorney all the facts in regard to the case. In this he is corroborated by the .attorney who testified in detail as to the statements made to him by the Sheriff. The attorney advised the Sheriff that he had a good case against the plaintiff and that he thought it was his duty to bring the prosecution. The ■Sheriff then applied to the judge of the district court, who prepared a complaint- and warrant for the arrest of the' plaintiff on the charge of forgery which was sent by mail to the Sheriff and on the 28th of December the complaint .and warrant, having been sworn to before a local justice of the peace, was turned over by the Sheriff to his deputy with instructions to have the plaintiff brought in. The deputy ■notified plaintiff that the Sheriff wished to see him and on the afternoon of the same day, after an interview between the plaintiff and the Sheriff, the Sheriff directed the deputy to serve the warrant and plaintiff was arrested thereon. He was arraigned the same day and for want of bail was ■committed to the county jail. On the following Monday *156 morning, the first court day after his arrest, he was arraigned in the district court and gave bail. Shortly afterward the-Sheriff for the first time learned there was another Elmer Babcock in Wakefield. He obtained samples of the handwriting of this Elmer E. Babcock and, finding that it was-similar to the handwriting on the check, he interviewed Elmer E. Babcock with the result that the latter admitted he had forged the indorsement on the check. Thereupon the Sheriff immediately telephoned the attorney for the-plaintiff, and told him that his client was innocent. Plaintiff’s attorney, according to the testimony of the Sheriff, which was uncontradicted, then asked the Sheriff if he would have the case against plaintiff dismissed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 A. 201, 44 R.I. 151, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-jones-ri-1922.