Poster v. Andrews

194 S.W.2d 337, 183 Tenn. 544, 19 Beeler 544, 1946 Tenn. LEXIS 236
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 194 S.W.2d 337 (Poster v. Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poster v. Andrews, 194 S.W.2d 337, 183 Tenn. 544, 19 Beeler 544, 1946 Tenn. LEXIS 236 (Tenn. 1946).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This litigation is the troubled aftermath of what appears to have been, in effect, a' common-law marriage relationship between the parties. The action is for malicious prosecution brought hy the woman. against the man with whom she had thus lived for some eight or ten years.' A judgment for the plaintiff for $2,500 was affirmed by the court of appeals. This Court granted certiorari and has heard argument.

In 1940‘ a separation agreement was entered into hy which, in settlement of plaintiff’s claims for damages for breach of promise to marry, Poster, a man of considerable means, hound himself to make periodic payments of $15 to plaintiff, hy analogy to alimony. Follow *547 ing default in the making of these payments, plaintiff sued. Poster for breach of promise. The jury awarded her $15,000, which the trial judge reduced to $7,500: The court of appeals, 26 Tenn. App. 86, 167 S. W. (2d) 1001, reversing the trial court, sustained a plea of accord and satisfaction. This court reversed and affirmed the judgment for $7,500, holding that this plea did not reach renewed promises to marry which were alleged and proven to have been made after the esecution of the settlement agreement above mentioned. See Poster v. Andrews, 182 Tenn. 671, 189 S. W. (2d) 580.

The instant suit grows out of matters which arose while the former suit was pending in this Court. It appears that, although doing a profitable business and in affluent circumstances, Poster constantly embarrassed plaintiff by refusing to meet when due' the $15 installment payments, forcing her to sue thereon. Thus harrassed and aggravated, she sought to interview him by phone and in person and was constantly repulsed. Thus matters stood when, on the afternoon of March 22, 1943, about 5 p. m., she secured admittance to his place of business in Morristown and succeeded in seeing and importuning him to pay her past-due installments then aggregating-several hundred dollars. He refused to pay her or to discuss the matter and proceeded to eject her forcibly from his office out on to the sidewalk, and summoned an officer to arrest, and remove her. She then discovered that, in some manner she can not clearly explain, she had gotten possession of a wrist watch he had been wearing' which had been a gift to him from employees, in the selection and making of which she had participated. She was thus in possession of this watch when taken by the officer to the jail. There she turned it over to either the sheriff, or her attorney, Mr. Smith, who had been sum *548 moned, and it was at once returned to Poster. She made no claim to it and says she had no thought or intention of stealing it. Meanwhile, Poster swore out a warrant charging her with larceny of this watch. The next day she was bound over at the preliminary trial and kept in jail pending disposition of the case. Several months passed. She testifies, without denial by Poster, who did •not take the stand, that he visited her, took her out in his car, and endeavored to get her to accept a cash settlement •of her contract for the installment payments, dismiss her •suit then pending in this Court and leave the state, offering, if she would do these things, to dismiss the charge of larceny and release her from jail; that otherwise she would be kept in jail indefinitely, and if she got out oh bond would be again arrested, or placed in an asylum, as she had been by him on a former occasion. She refused •and later Poster withdrew his charge of larceny and brought about the abandonment of the prosecution and she was released from jail, after having been kept there three months and three days. This action followed.

The trial judge submitted to the jury the question whether or not, in the light of these!'facts and circumstances, the defendant had probable or reasonable cause in good faith to believe that this woman had been guilty of larceny in the taking of his watch; that if he had acted without such probable cause and been actuated by malice, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. He correctly defined larceny as “the felonious taking and carrying away of the personal goods of another, against the owner’s consent, and with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of the use thereof.”

It may be said just here that we find no material evidence of that “intent” which is an essential ingredient of this crime. Indeed, there appears to have been *549 •no “intent” in respect to this taking of any kind. The man and woman, long intimately associated, became engaged in a violent physical struggle. In the conrse of it, she incidentally and without any formed intent to .do so, became possessed of his wrist- watch, how she cannot explain. It might have been any other ornament, snch as a pin or bntton, or a part of his attire, a necktie or handkerchief, snatched from his person in the conrse of their violent struggle. Or she might well have found herself in possession of a lock of his hair, or even a finger or an ear — as sometimes happens. (This might have been mayhem, but not larceny!) The conditions did not admit of the forming of an intent to commit this crime. It was an unconscious culmination unpremeditated and unpur-posed.

The court of appeals, discussing the elements essential to constitute larceny, quotes from 32 Am. Jur. 928, giving as distinguishing exceptions, where the taking is temporary, “for the purpose of revenging himself upon the owner, of inducing the owner to act in accordance with the wishes of the taker, or of coercing the owner into payment of a bona fide claim, or the performance of a legal duty.” This-text is well supported by annotations in 13 A. L. R. 142.

If any intent whatever may he ascribed to plaintiff in the instant case, the most reasonable conclusion is that her “purpose” was one among those in the foregoing quotation.

The court also cites, in this connection, Fields v. State, 46 Tenn. 524. The writer of that opinion quotes Greenleaf on Ev. Vol. 3, Sec. 157, wherein the distinction is emphasized between takings which constitute larceny and trespasses only. Amony other cases of trespass only mentioned, are where it appears that “the prisoner took *550 the prosecutor’s goods openly in his presence, or the presence of other joersons, and not by robbery; . . . or took them by mistake arising from his own negligence; these- circumstances would be pregnant evidence to the jury, that the taking was without a felonious intent, and therefore but a mere trespass.” (Page 527 of 46 Tenn.).

Both of these conditions have direct application here.

The primary insistence of petitioner here is that the facts and circumstances evidenced that the defendant Poster acted upon probable cause appearing* in good faith to him at the time and that there being no material evidence to the contrary, the trial judge erred in overruling his motion for peremptory instructions; and, specifically, that the court of appeals has disregarded the rule in this jurisdiction which places the burden of proving want of such probable cause on the plaintiff in an action for malicious prosecution.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W.2d 337, 183 Tenn. 544, 19 Beeler 544, 1946 Tenn. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poster-v-andrews-tenn-1946.