Mehlstaub v. Michael

287 S.W. 1079, 221 Mo. App. 807, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 177
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 1079 (Mehlstaub v. Michael) 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
Mehlstaub v. Michael, 287 S.W. 1079, 221 Mo. App. 807, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 177 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff by reason of an assault and battery having been committed upon him by defendant L. E. Michael. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $5,00 compensatory damages, and defendants have appealed.

Tihe facts show that for, some time prior to May 22, 1924, plaintiff was employed.as a baker’s salesman bj^ the Campbell Baking Company in Kansas City, Missouri, and that his duties took him to the grocery store owned and operated by defendants. Until about two .weeks prior to said date, defendants had been plaintiff’s customers. Plaintiff testified that on the morning of said day, “I was calling on Mr. Michael about a year and a half and he told me he didn’t want any more bread. That is, Mr1. Michael here, sitting there; so I thought it would not hurt to go in and ask the man if he needed anything more. I told him it didn’t take but a minute to come in and ask him if he needed anything. He said it would not be necessary to come in. Naturally a fellow selling anything will go in and try to keep his trade; and I kept coming in, and they didn’t think I ought to; and I came in that morning and when I started in I heard the remark, ‘ Here comes that son-of-a-bitch again. ’ Whether he referred to — but I' thought he did. I went on in and asked him if he needed anything and he said ‘No, I don’t want anything and get to hell out of here, and stay out.’ Well, I said, ‘A fellow has a right to come in and ask a fair question, if you need anything.’ So he says ‘Get to hell out of here, and stay out! ’ I says, ‘ If you feel that way about it. ’ I says, ‘A fellow don’t have to be'a son-of-a-bitch to come in to see you.’ *809 And he hit me, and I turned around and says ‘I don’t believe you could do that on the outside. ’ So I started .to turn and go out and that is the last I remember. Whether I fought or clinched him] after that, I don’t know anything about it.’4

Other testimony on the part of plaintiff tended to show that he was down upon the street in front of defendants’ store and that L. E. Michael kicked him and hit him, “kind of raised him up and struck him.” As a result of being struck, plaintiff was rendered unconscious, some of his teeth were knocked out, he was in the hospital for twenty-four hours, and lost two weeks from, his work.

Defendant L. E. Michael testified that about a w;eek before the day in controversy, plaintiff came into the store and said, “I don’t see why these sons-of-bitches can’t sell my bread; they sell other bread.” The witness replied that he permitted his customers to select the the kind of bread they desired and that if they did not get plaintiff’s it was not the witness’s fault. “And if you feel that way about it, you get your bread out and stay out.” That plaintiff returned on the day in question and stated to the witness, “ ‘How about my bread this morning?’ to which witness replied ‘No, I don’t want none this morning. I will let you know when I want your bread; but you just stay out awhile on account of the remarks you made the other day.’ Plaintiff twisted around and walked up and down the floor and kept one hand in his coat pocket all the time he was talking. ’ ’

“Q. How long was he in there at that time? A. It was about thirty or thirty-five minutes — that long anyway. And I asked him, I says, ‘Now, go on and let me alone so I can do what I have got to do. I have got meat to cut, and I can’t do anything and talk to you.’ And it went along and if I would go- to the back end for something, he would follow 'me, and he kept on, and he didn’t see why in hell we couldn’t sell his bread. He says, ‘The other people sells it.’ He says ‘What have I .done? Anything I have done you don’t want?’ I says, ‘Not a thing; but when you call me a son-of-a-biteh, I ¡have no more use for you.’ And I went to go from the back end towards the front, and just as I started from behind the counter, he turned around and pulled his hand out of his coat and when he did that I ¡hit him and he fell back. He fell towards the back end when I hit him. And then he got up and came up front where I was and says ‘You can’t go out-of-doors and do that.’ I says, ‘I will go anywhere with you.’ And he started out and I came out; and as I got started out the door he turned around and faced me and struck at me. And when he did that I clinched him, and he went down on the sidewalk.

“Q. You clinched? A. Yes, sir. That is, I throwed him down, of course, and he hit me several licks; and then Dad came to the door and told me to let him up. And he says, ‘Quit, Michael!’ He *810 (plaintiff) says, ‘Quit, Michael! I have got enough.’ And Dad says ‘Get up and let hiin alone.’ And I got up and went back in the store. That is the whole story. ’ ’

The witness further testified that he was not a member of, the grocery firm of O. E. Michael and Son, but was merely working there; that he had authority to tell plaintiff whether or not he wanted plaintiff’s bread; that he could not tell what plaintiff had in his hand when he pulled it out of his pocket; that “he (the witness) didn’t take no chances; ’ ’ that he did not hit plaintiff as the latter went out the door and not until plaintiff turned around and hit him.

The testimony of L. E. Michael was corroborated by other witnesses of defendants.

In rebuttal, plaintiff testified that he never called defendant L. E. Michael any names; that he was not drunk on the morning in question nor did he have any “dope;” that he did not stay in the store ten minutes.

Defendant O. E. Michael, although in the store, did not testify.

The petition is headed:

“In the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, at Kansas City, September Term, 1924. Joseph Mehlstaub, Plaintiff, v. Orry E. Michael and L. E. Michael, doing business under the firmi name and style of O. E. Michael & Son, Grocers, Defendants. No. 207621.”

And in the body thereof it is alleged “that the defendants herein own and operate a grocery store in said territory under the firm name and style of O. E. Michael & Son, Grocery;” that upon entering the store plaintiff was addressed by the defendants in a vulgar, vile and repulsive manner; that in response to his inquiry as to whether defendants were in need of any of his goods he was informed by defendants that they did not desire to purchase any of his goods and requested plaintiff to stay out of the store; that immediately thereafter defendant L. E. Michael assaulted the plaintiff, striking him. The petition prayed judgment in the sum of $3000 actual and $3000 punitive damag’es. The answer consisted merely of an unverified general denial.

•It is insisted that the petition fails to state a cause of action against the defendant O. E. Michael; that it does not state that L. E. Michael was an employee of his father, O. E. Michael, or that the former acted within the scope of his authority in ejecting the plaintiff from the store; that it does not charge that O. E. Michael was present, aiding and abetting his son or that the two acted in concert in assaulting the plaintiff; that the petition does not allege that “Orry E. Michael and L. E. Michael were copartners, doing business under the firm name and style of O. E. Michael & Son, but only that they were doing business under the firm name and style of O. E. Michael & Son, Grocers, ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 1079, 221 Mo. App. 807, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mehlstaub-v-michael-moctapp-1926.