Martin v. Woodlea Investment Co.

226 S.W. 650, 206 Mo. App. 33, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 218, 206 Mo. App. 34
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 650 (Martin v. Woodlea Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Woodlea Investment Co., 226 S.W. 650, 206 Mo. App. 33, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 218, 206 Mo. App. 34 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

This is an action for false imprisonment. Originally, the suit was as against the Woodlea Investment Company, the Kresky Investment Company and Kresky individually, but a dismissal was entered as to the Kresky Investment Company, and, upon a trial, verdict and judgment was had against the other two defendants, in the sum of $500 actual and $1000 punitive damages. They have appealed.

The Woodlea Investment Company, of which the defendant Kresky was the president and the principal owner, conducted a garage which was managed and controlled by said Kresky. The force employed there consisted of a white man, who acted as foreman, and three negroes. Plaintiff was one of the latter and was employed as a washer of automobiles downstairs in the basement of the garage.

Kresky, suspecting that the privately owned automobiles kept in the garage were being used at night by his *35 employees for their own. private gain or pleasure, reported that to the police at a District Station a few blocks away and asked for protection. Manifestly, he suspected all of them, for he reported that “his men” were doing this and, though asked by the officer if he had any one at the garage he could depend on to tell him, he did not act on such suggestions, and the. officer thereupon told him the only thing the police could do to help him was for him, Kresky, to have somebody to watch them, the employees, “and when they take out a car, we will send over and arrest them and put the in the police court. ’ ’ Kresky, acting on this suggestion, then went with the officer (Captain Whalen, who was about to go off duty for the day), to Sergeant Young was had charge of the station for the night, and the situation was explained to him, Whalen telling Young that Kresky was “going to watch for fellows taking cars out at night and when he calls, send somebody over and arrest them and we will put them in police court.” Young furnished Kresky with policeman Walker who was to go with him and watch the garage that night. The evidence is that at the time of obtaining this policeman, Kresky said “his men were taking his patrons’ cars out of the garage and using them for their own personal use, and he wanted an officer to go with him and arrest them if possible. Policeman Walker thereupon went with Kresky and together they watched the garage till near midnight. But nothing happened, so Kresky finally went away and called up the garage over the telephone, pretending that he was a prospective passenger needing the services of an automobile to take him from 36th and Central Streets to the. depot. The foreman answered the telephone and agreed upon a price of 75 cents for this service, and Kresky said he would be ready in thirty minutes. Kresky then went back to policeman Walker who was still on watch and told him what had been done and Walker thereupon went to the appointed place, and, when he foreman of the garage came therefrom in a privately owned car, Walker arrested him and took him to the garage whither Kresky had gone and where he was when the policeman and his *36 prisoner, the foreman, arrived. The policeman then took the foreman to the police station where he was hooked for investigation and later the charge was changed to using personal property not his own.

After the foreman was locked up, Sergeant Young (who died before the trial of the case at bar), ordered Policeman Clark to go to the garage and arrest the negroes. He went to the garage, found the two negroes, plaintiff being one of them, in the basement washing cars. He arrested them. The police station was telephoned to for the police car to be sent to the garage, and as it was policeman Walker’s duty to haul in prisoners, he took the car to the garage and there found the plaintiff and the other employees under arrest and in charge of Officer Clark. The two policemen brought them, the prisoners, to the station. The arrest of plaintiff was made about three o’clock in the morning, and when he was taken to the station he was locked up.

According to plaintiff’s evidence, Kresky ivas in the garage when officer Clark called plaintiff up froin the basement and placed him under arrest. Manifestly, plaintiff’s arrest was with full knowledge, consent and acquiescence of Kresky. Certainly the jury could reasonably find-that he, being present in the garage at the time the arrest was made and the telephone message sent to the station for the car, was agreeing and consenting to the arrest, for thaugh the arresting policeman Clark came on the order of Sergeant Young, that was pursuant to the arrangement had between him and Kresky.

The next morning at the police station, Kresky was there, and the foreman was brought up from his cell and questioned by Captain Whalen who had come on duty for the day. He finally admitted his guilt in taking the car out, but implicated the other men as being similarly guilty. Thereupon the other men, including plaintiff were brought up and questioned. Plaintiff, in Kresky’s presence, asserted his innocence saying he had not taken out any cars. Captain Whalen’s evidence at this point is: “Then I turned to Kresky who was outside in the hall, and I asked him, and I said, ‘We will put them all *37 in the police court and let them just thresh it out. ’ ’ ’ And “Kresky said, ‘All -right — whatever you say.’ I says that is the only way to do it. I said, ‘Those hoys said they didn’t take them out, and this fellow says they all took them out.” The force of this testimony against Kresky cannot be lessened by any claim that when Whalen turned to Kresky and asked him what to do, he referred solely to the foreman and not to the plaintiff or to the others. For manifestly the conversation was concerning all of the men and not the foreman merely. Besides there was no question as to-his guilt. He had been caught in the act and had confessed, and there was no need of taking the other man to the police court except to ascertain whether or not they were also guilty.

When it was decided to take the men to the police court, Whalen’ realized that the police car at his disposal was too small to carry all of them and he told Kresky that if he had to call the patrol wagon from another District Station, it would take up a good deal of time. Thereupon Kresky, who had a big car, hauled the prisoners, including plaintiff, down to the police court in his car. At the police trial, Kresky was present and testified against plaintiff. The latter was fined ten dollars. He appealed to the criminal court where, finally after several continuances by the City, the case against him was dismissed and he thereupon brought this action.

In addition to the foregoing, as shown by the evidence in plaintiff’s favor, Kresky, himself, though denying that he personally ordered anyone arrested, unless perhaps the one who actually took a car out that night, testified that’“I made several trips to Captain Whalen, and things got to going pretty fast, and I made a trip late in the evening the .night of the 24th, and told him I had decided to lay for the bunch that night — that I was going to stay out all night, and if I could get an officer, I wanted to see if anybody was taking cars out. I asked him if I could get an officer in case I caught somebody taking cars out.

“Q. So you could get them arrested? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 650, 206 Mo. App. 33, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 218, 206 Mo. App. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-woodlea-investment-co-moctapp-1920.