Pinkerton v. Gilbert

22 Ill. App. 568, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 88
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 9, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 Ill. App. 568 (Pinkerton v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinkerton v. Gilbert, 22 Ill. App. 568, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 88 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Bailey, J.

This was an action of trespass, brought by William Gilbert against the Brighton Cotton Manufacturing Company, Frank P.'Berry and Matthew W. Pinkerton, for false imprisonment. During the pendency of the suit Berry died and the suit was thereby abated as to him. At the trial the court, at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, instructed the jury to find the Brighton Cotton Manufacturing Company not guilty, which was accordingly done, and the court, after overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, gave judgment in favor of said company for costs. Evidence in defense was offered on behalf of defendant Pinkerton, and the jury thereupon rendered a verdict, as to him finding him guilty, and assessing the plaintiff’s damages at $500, for which sum and costs the court, after overruling a motion by said Pinkerton for a new trial, gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The plaintiff brings the record to this court by writ of error, assigning for error the instruction to the jury to find the Brighton Cotton Manufacturing Company not guilty, and the overruling of the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial as to that company, and defendant Pinkerton also comes here by writ of error and assigns various errors.

It appears that for several years prior to the commission of the trespasses complained of, the plaintiff was a dealer in paper stock and materials, having his place of business in the City of Chicago, and -that said Brighton Cotton Manufacturing Company was a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois, and owning and operating extensive cotton mills in Brighton near said city. Some time in October or the early part of November, 1884, one Bosie Kramer succeeded, by means of certain fraudulent artifices, in getting into her possession and taking away from said company’s mills a quantity of cotton waste without paying for it. Said property was afterward purchased from said Bosie Kramer or her husband by the plaintiff, such purchase being made by him in good faith and without knowledge on his part of the circumstances under which it was procured by the vendor. Soon after the disappearance of said goods, Atkins, who at the time was the superintendent of said mills, instructed Morgan, the foreman, to place the matter in the hands of said Pinkerton, the proprietor of a detective agency, which was done. Pinkerton succeeded in tracing said property into the plaintiff’s hands, and thereupon a suit in replevin was commenced by him in the name of said company against Bosie Kramer and the plaintiff before a Justice of the Peace, to recover possession of said property, the affidavit in replevin being made by Morgan and the replevin bond being signed by Atkins as surety. Defendants, Pinkerton and Berry, the latter being a Constable, went to the plaintiff’s store with the replevin writ and demanded possession of the property, and then for the first time the plaintiff learned the circumstances under which said property had been obtained from the company. The plaintiff thereupon told Pinkerton all the facts attending his purchase and showed him the entries in his books of the receipt of the same and the price paid, and also his entries of the sale of the property and the name of the purchaser. Pinkerton being apparently satisfied with the honesty of the plaintiff, told him that he wanted to find ont the whereabouts of Eosie Kramer, and the plaintiff, at his instance, promised to do everything in his power to aid him in the search and to give him any information he might obtain in relation thereto. The evidence tends to show that Pinkerton at the same time told the plaintiff that, under the circumstances, he did not desire to prosecute the suit as against him, and promised, in consideration of the plaintiff’s aiding him in the search for the Kramers, to have the suit continued from time to time until they should be found, and that when the trial should occur the plaintiff would be summoned as a witness; that in violation of this understanding, Pinkerton, while holding frequent consultations with the plaintiff in relation to the Kramers, caused judgment to be entered in said suit,*in trover, without the knowledge of the plaintiff, for the sum of §164.50 and costs, and that before the plaintiff became aware of the entry of said judgment, the time prescribed by law for taking an appeal therefrom had elapsed; that Pinkerton then caused an execution to be issued on said judgment commanding the Constable, of the goods and chattels of the plaintiff, to make the amount of the judgment, and for want of such goods and chattels to take the body of the plaintiff and convey and deliver him to the keeper of the county jail, and commanding the keeper of said jail to receive and keep the plaintiff in safe custody until said judgment should be paid and satisfied or the plaintiff should be discharged in due course of law.

The evidence further tends to show that Pinkerton, after placing said writ in the hands of Berry, the Constable, went with him to the plaintiff’s store where the plaintiff had goods and chattels which he was owing in his own right, of the value of many thousand dollars; that Pinkerton and the Constable demanded payment of the execution in money, threatening that if it was not so paid they would arrest him on the writ and take him to jail; that the plaintiff then pointed out to Pinkerton and the Constable, goods and chattels then present and of which he was the owner, of at least §5,000 in value, and told them to levy their execution thereon, but that the officer, acting under Pinkerton’s advice and direction, refused to make sucli levy and arrested the plaintiff and took him to the county jail and delivered him to the keeper of said jail. Many of the foregoing facts are disputed by Pinkerton’s evidence, especially those relating to the circumstances of the plaintifí’s arrest, his testimony being that the plaintiff refused to turn out property on the execution and forbid any levy thereon by the Constable, and that he, Pinkerton, gave no directions to the Constable and in no way interfered with his action in the premises. It appears that the plaintiff, the same day he was arrested, was discharged on habeas corpus.

The only question raised by the errors assigned on behalf of the plaintiff is, whether Atkins had authority from the Brighton Cotton Manufacturing Company to employ Pinker-, ton to institute ' and prosecute said replevin suit in its name and to issue execution and cause the arrest of the plaintiff thereon. His axithority is denied both in his own testimony and in that of all the witnesses who testify on that subject Was it within the scope of his authority as superintendent of said company’s mills? As superintendent he had general oversight of the operation of said mills, and was charged with the duty of employing and discharging operatives, and when expressly directed so to do by Mitchel, the secretary and treasurer, he was in the habit of buying and selling goods for the company. This, as the evidence shows without any contradiction, was the extent of his authority. It seems clear to us that this did not include an authority to institute or prosecute suits on behalf of the company. The duties of his office as superintendent had nothing to do with the fiscal concerns of the'cómpany. • They did not include the receipt or payment of money or the collection or enforcement of demands in favor of the company.

The doctrine of respondeat superior applies only to acts performed by an agent within the" scope of his employment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ill. App. 568, 1887 Ill. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinkerton-v-gilbert-illappct-1887.