Mahan v. Adam

124 A. 901, 144 Md. 355, 1924 Md. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 124 A. 901 (Mahan v. Adam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahan v. Adam, 124 A. 901, 144 Md. 355, 1924 Md. LEXIS 8 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment recovered in the Baltimore City court by Mildred J. Adam, the appellee, against the appellant, Charles Mahan, in an action for false imprisonment.

In the trial of the case twelve exceptions were taken to the court’s rulings. One upon the prayers, including its action in overruling the special exceptions to the granting of the plaintiff’3 third prayer. The other exceptions relate to its rulings on the evidence.

By the defendant’s first prayer, which was refused, the court was asked to instruct the jury that there was no evidence legally sufficient to entitle the- plaintiff to recover.

In passing upon this ruling it will be necessary to go to some length in stating the evidence produced at the trial.

The plaintiff testified that the defendant, who was engaged in the candy business, had two stores in the City of Baltimore, one at 413 North Howard Street and the other on Baltimore Street, next door to the Emerson Hotel.

The plaintiff, a young woman, twenty years of age at the time of the trial, was, with others, employed as saleswoman *357 at tlie Howard Street store, and liad Leen so- employed by tlie defendant for about three weeks when, on the 28th day oí December, 1921, the defendant said to- her that lie had been told by his daughter that she, the plaintiff, had been “topping off” sixty-cent candy with dollar chocolate-s. -She denied the accusation, and he replied that he was only telling her what his daughter had told him. On the next day, December 29th, the defendant said to her, “Listen, kid, I want year to go to the Emerson with ine this evening.” -She told loin she could not go. He then asked where she was going that evening and she replied, “Yowhere.” Whereupon he asked her why she could not go with him to the Emerson. She said slip had to go home. He then told her to- get her supper at the store and tell her father and mother she would not be home until eleven o’clock. She asked him “What for,” and lie said, “My skinny girl has- gone b-ack on me and I need someone.” Then plaintiff then asked him what bis wife would say, -and he replied “the old girl” would never find it out. After saying this be walked off, but be carne back to her and said, “You do not understand me, L want, you to- go to the store next to the Emerson,” and be again told her to call up her people and tell them she would not be home until 11 o’uloek and to get her supper at the store. When she arrived at. the Baltimore Street store she found in charge of it a young woman whom she had not seen before, who showed her “bow to ring up- on the cash irgister.” It bad separate keys for the soda and candy sales. The war tax was kept on a piece of paper, and she was shown the money box under the counter where she was to put the money.

After the young woman had left the store, the plaintiff made a few minor sales and in each case rang up the register as she had been directed. Thereafter, about 7 o’clock, a woman came in the store and asked for a two-pound box of assorted chocolates, the price of which was sixty cents a pound. The plaintiff proceeded to wait upon her, but while *358 doing so a man came in and asked for a hot chocolate, saying that he was in a hurry. With the, woman’s consent, the plaintiff waited upon the man and received from him ten cents for the hot chocolate. This she put upon the register and then waited upon the woman, who gave to her one dollar and twenty cents for the assorted chocolates. She then ’phoned to her people and took, five cents of that money to pay the charge. This was necessary as. it was a pay ’phone. The balance, one dollar and fifteen cents, she put in the cash register and rang it up-, and the ten cents received for the hot chocolate she put in the box and rang it up. When this was done Mahan came in and .asked her if she had been busy. She told him she had not been very busy. He then said, after looking at the register, “What is, the one dollar and fifteen cents for ?” She at once became nervous because, of the w:ay in which he acted and the manner1 in which he asked the question. She replied, “I sold a two-pound box of candy for one dollar and fifteen cents.” He then told her to close the store at 10.30 o’clock and go home, and walked out, saying good night.

After that Mr. Davis., who at that time was unknown to her, but who, she afterwards learned, was a detective, came in the store .and asked for two. pounds of assorted chocolate for one dollar. She told him she could not sell two pounds for one dollar, that the price was sixty cents a pound, hut she would fix him up one and three-quarter pounds for one dollar. While she was waiting on him, two hoys came in, and she sold them two coca colas, the proceeds of which she rang up>, and when she received the one dollar from Mr. Davis, she rang up that sale as. he was going out the door and “made out a slip to that effect.”

'Thereafter the. defendant again came into the store, followed by Mr. Davis and a woman to. whom she had sold the chocolates, Mrs.. Hasketh, who was. also a detective. The defendant said to them, “Take that thief out of here, take her out of here, she stole fifty dollars from, me, ten dollars a day, *359 and she is a thief, do your duty, take her out of here.” Davis said to her, “Come on to headquarters.”

The plaintiff asked what she had done and Mrs. Hasketh said, “You know you did not ring* up the ten cents of the young man’s who came in .and got. a hot chocolate. The de^ fendant had in the meantime been to the cash register, taking-off the tape and looking- at the sales, and to the cash drawer, and her pocket book was. lying on the counter, “though, the defendant did not go near it.” That he told her to come around to headquarters. Mrs. Hasketh took her by the arm and they together walked up Oalvert Street to the court house.

While in the store, the plaintiff told Davis and Mahan that she used the missing five cents to pay the ’phone charges already mentioned, and she suggested they could call up. the number and ascertain the truth of her statement, which they did not do. That Davis, while still in the store, said in the presence of Mahan, “This young lady has done nothing, outside of taking the five cents she has told you about,” but the defendant said, “Do your duty, take her out.” Mrs. Hasketh then said, “What about tbe ten cents you also- took?” Tbe plaintiff replied that, she had put it in the box; that she could see it on the sales sheets., and if she would count the money she would find it in the box.

The witness further testified that she had been paid off the Saturday before and gave her mother eight dollars and had four dollars herself, and at this time she had in her purse around three dollars and told the defendant to look in her pocket if he thought she took the money; that Mr. Davis said, “Ho, I know where the money has gone, I won’t search you,” and witness said, “Well, let him (meaning Mr. Mahan) look in it,” and lie would not search the witness; that the defendant, asked her to. tell him who had been taking his money if she had not, .and she told him that she had seen his daughter take money out, of the cash register several times, but did not know what for.

On their arrival at the court house she was taken to the office of McGovern, captain of detectives.

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Bluebook (online)
124 A. 901, 144 Md. 355, 1924 Md. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahan-v-adam-md-1924.