Maher v. Wilson

73 P. 418, 139 Cal. 514, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 853
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1903
DocketS.F. No. 2775.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 73 P. 418 (Maher v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maher v. Wilson, 73 P. 418, 139 Cal. 514, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 853 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

Action for false imprisonment. Plaintiff had judgment, and defendants appeal therefrom and from an order denying a new trial.

Defendants are members of the firm of Wilson Brothers & Co., engaged in dealing in lumber in the city of San Francisco, and in January, 1900, procured a cargo of lumber to be shipped to them from a northern port by the Hale & Kern Contracting Company, of Portland, Oregon, on their barge, at a specified rate per thousand feet. The lumber was measured at the shipping port, but there was some dissatisfaction with the measurement, and it was agreed between Wilson Brothers & Co. and said contracting company that the cargo should be remeasured at San Francisco when it should be taken from the barge, the expense of resurveying the lumber to be borne equally by the parties. Said owners of the barge employed one D. J. Miller, as stevedore, to discharge the lumber from the barge at San Francisco, and on January 28, 1900, wrote him as follows: “Mr. Wilson is not satisfied with the -mil] tally there, and told Mr. Kern that he would pay half to have it tallied in San Francisco; we have written *515 to Wilson Brothers & Co., and agree to pay the other half of the tally. There is only 937,000 feet according to their tally.” Miller, without consulting Wilson Brothers & Co., employed the plaintiff to tally the lumber, and the work of discharging commenced on February 8, 1900. Defendant Johnson, upon being informed that plaintiff was to tally the lumber, notified both him and Miller that his tally would not be received, and this notice was given before the work of discharging the lumber was commenced. On January 28, 1900, (the date of their letter to Miller,) Hale & Kern Contracting Company wrote Wilson Brothers & Co., as follows: ‘‘Our Mr. Kern returned from Aberdeen and reports that Mr. Wilson there, and he also, are not satisfied with the tally of lumber made at Wilson’s wharf and loaded on the Washtucna. Mr. Wilson said he would pay half the cost of tallying the lumber at San Francisco; we are willing to pay the other half, and wish you would have it tallied.” Plaintiff testified that he was employed on February 8,1900, by the Hale & Kern Contracting Company, through Miller, the stevedore, to survey said cargo, and commenced work about eight o’clock in the morning, and continued until five in the evening, excepting an hour and a quarter that he was absent; that defendant Wilson came on the barge, about half-past ten o’clock, and demanded to know by what right he (the plaintiff) was there; that he told him that Miller had employed him; that Wilson then said, ‘‘You are discharged”; that he told Wilson he had no right to discharge him, that he was not in his employ; that Wilson after consulting Miller told plaintiff that he should leave the barge, that he would not accept any stock from the barge while he (the plaintiff) was there; that he refused to leave the barge, but admitted that defendants were the consignees of the cargo; that he (plaintiff) had another conversation with Wilson about eleven o’clock, when he came with defendant Johnson; that Miller then spoke to him, saying that Wilson had commanded him to leave the barge, and if he did not leave he (Wilson) would get an officer and have him arrested ; that he stepped off the barge onto the wharf and told Wilson that he might get an officer and have him arrested. Plaintiff further testified, that he went to work again at one o’clock, and that Wilson asked, ‘‘Why do you persist in stay *516 ing here and tallying my lumber when I do not wish you to do it? I notify you not to touch or survey that lumber, and if you do I will get an officer and have you arrested”; that he did not answer him, but proceeded with his work; that he started to measure a piece of lumber, and Wilson struck him in the face and knocked him down, and when he recovered he knocked Wilson down, and one of Wilson’s drivers attacked him and struck him on his face and cut it, and when the struggle was ended he went to work again; that about a half-hour afterwards police-officers McGraham and Driscoll came and demanded to know what he was doing; that after talking with him they went and consulted Wilson, and then came and put him under arrest and took him to defendants’ office; that he demanded that Wilson be taken to the City Hall; that he did not know whether it was Wilson or Johnson that made the remark that they did not care about prosecuting him, but he overheard something like that said to the officers at defendants’ office; that the officer took plaintiff to the City Hall on a street-car; that Johnson drove up, but Wilson did not go; that no charge was made there.

It appeared from other evidence that Johnson had not witnessed the breach of the peace, and was told he could not make a complaint; that he said he did not want to, that he only desired to have him removed from the wharf. Plaintiff also testified that he was to have six dollars per day, and it would require about eight days to discharge the lumber and make out the manifest; that he was paid by Miller for one day’s work, and twelve dollars for loss of employment; that he was absent from the wharf about an hour and a quarter, about fifteen or twenty minutes of which was spent at the City Hall.

Officer McGraham, called by the plaintiff, testified that he was then acting as bailiff in Judge Conlan’s court; that Johnson made a statement to the judge, and from that statement he took him to Captain Spillane, and the captain sent him to the wharf to see what the trouble was; that Johnson pointed out plaintiff as the cause of all the trouble, and said he wanted •him arrested, and that he served the subprenas upon the witnesses Johnson pointed out. It is not necessary to go over in detail the evidence given on the part of the defendants. It *517 shows somewhat-more fully the details of the day’s trials and exasperations. It was testified, however, that up to the evening of the day before defendants had been unable to procure the services of a member of the lumbermen’s association, but then found one who promised to come at noon of the 8th and had obtained a competent man to tally until his arrival. It was further shown that defendants had hired one hundred and fifty feet of the wharf for the discharge of the lumber.

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing his damages at one thousand dollars. On the hearing of defendants’ motion for a new trial the court made a conditional order, to the effect that if plaintiff would remit one half of said sum the motion would be denied; that otherwise it would be granted. Plaintiff remitted one half of the amount, and defendants’ motion for a new trial was thereupon denied. It should have been granted.

No actual damages were shown. Plaintiff was never employed by the defendants or their firm to survey that cargo of lumber. That Miller, the stevedore, had no authority to employ him on behalf of the defendants or of their firm is clear. Miller was simply informed that the lumber was to be tallied, the expense to be borne equally by that company and the consignee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 P. 418, 139 Cal. 514, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maher-v-wilson-cal-1903.