Redgate v. Southern Pacific Co.

141 P. 1191, 24 Cal. App. 573, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1224.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 141 P. 1191 (Redgate v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redgate v. Southern Pacific Co., 141 P. 1191, 24 Cal. App. 573, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 53 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

The complaint charges that defendant “maliciously and without probable cause or any reason therefor, and against the will of the plaintiff and without warrant therefor, caused the plaintiff to be arrested and falsely imprisoned on or about the 4th day of March, 1907, in the city and county of San Francisco.” In a second count it is charged that “defendant procured on the 8th day of March, 1907, from the police court” in said city and county, in an action entitled: “The People of the State of California v. A. Redgate and Lloyd Newman, a warrant for the arrest of said plaintiff which said warrant was founded upon a complaint sworn to at the instance of said defendant,” charging “plaintiff with having feloniously stolen a certain case of shoes of the value of seventy-five dollars.”

The cause was tried by a jury and plaintiff had the verdict assessing his damages at five hundred dollars and judgment was accordingly entered for that amount. Defendant appeals from the judgment and from the order denying its motion for a new trial.

It appeared that a case of shoes had been stolen from the defendant’s freight sheds where plaintiff was employed by *575 defendant as a “checker,” and Lloyd Newman was employed as a “trucker.” Plaintiff, when called as a witness, thus explained their duties: “The teamster puts freight on the truck right at the door, and he loads from my checking. The trucker brings it to the door. I tell the trucker what to bring to the door. I point out the things he shall put on the truck and bring down—I pick them out myself—they are dumped on a platform on the edge of the door. I check them to see that the numbers are all right and the goods.”

It further appeared that James Regan, a detective sergeant of the city police department, of seventeen years’ service, found the ease of shoes at a second-hand store kept by one Heintz, who informed Regan that one Murphy brought the case of shoes to Heintz’ store “for a man named Classen to sell it.” Classen was a teamster “driving a team and truck for the Clute Draying Company” and “was hauling a good deal of freight from the railroad shed of the Southern Pacific Company.” Thomas Madden was a “special agent or special officer or railroad policeman for the S. P. Company” and had been, for about fifteen years, stationed at Fourth and King streets. He testified: “The loss of the shoes was reported first by the railroad, after that Mr. Regan spoke to me about it. It was soon after. He told me that he had located this particular case of shoes and they belonged to George H. Young. Then we worked together on the case. . . . Mr. Regan went and arrested Classen at the headquarters of Clute, Clute’s barn, I went with him. He asked him what he knew about the shoes, and this man Classen said that he was not the only one that was in it, there were others, he said the men in the shed were in on that kind of work, so Mr. Regan asked him if he knew the men, he said he could not call them by name, but he knew them by delivering freight, and he could point them out, and he came with Officer Regan and myself down to the shed and he pointed out Redgate and Newman as the two men. Redgate was the one who was delivering the goods to him and Newman was the trucker, and that the two men made an agreement with him to take the shoes and sell them and divide up the proceeds between them. He said that in the presence of both men and me and Regan, and in their hearing. They denied it, they said they did not do it, they said but very little, they *576 denied it, that was the nature of what they said. They were booked for larceny. A complaint was sworn to afterwards against them. I swore to that complaint. Mr. Regan and myself called upon Mr. Kelly before that complaint was drawn up. It was after these men were under arrest that I first took the matter up with Kelly.” Mr. Kelly was an attorney at law of twenty-five years’ practice and attended “to the criminal business of the S. P. Co. in this city and county.” Witness Madden further testified: “Q. When you took the matter up with Mr. Kelly, did you and Mr. Regan explain the evidence that was against these men? A. Everything just as I am telling it here, or as near as I can think it. I explained the matter to him as fully as I knew how. Mr. Moore: Q. Did' you believe that Redgate and Newman had stood in on the proposition of putting that box of shoes on Classen’s truck, with the idea that Classen would sell it, and they would cut up the proceeds ? A. From what Classen said I did, from Classen’s words. Q. Do you believe it still? A. From what the man told us, I believed it then, and I believe it still, the same as I did then. I do not remember when I first saw Mr. Kelly. The complaint was sworn to after the arrest.”

Regan testified to much the same state of facts. He further testified: “Q. Did' you believe at the time they were arrested, at the time the complaint was filed, that there was probable cause to believe they had committed an act— A. I did. Q. Do you believe it yet? A. I do; the shoes were stolen and they were all concerned in it, if Classen’s word was to be believed. Classen drove a bonded warehouse truck, and he was not receiving any goods out of there that did not come from a certain place, as I understood from Classen any goods that he got on the truck. outside of that he had no right to get it. Q. And you believe that he got it through this checker and this trucker ? A. Well, that was his say so, he accused them; he did not think over it a minute, when I asked him he said CI ain’t the only one, Regan, there were others. ’ Newman and Redgate denied it. They said they did not know anything at all about it, they did not know he got this case out of there at all. They claimed that they had not given him this ease. Q. Did they refuse to answer questions in regard to the matter, particular questions ? A. They *577 would not make any statement whatsoever. Q. Did you ask them to make a statement ? A. I did. ’ ’

Classen testified that he “got a box of shoes down there at the railroad sheds sometime during the latter part of the month of February, 1907, from Mr. Redgate and William Newman.” He explained what he did with the shoes and what took place after his arrest. Speaking of what he said to the arresting officers, he testified: “I denied having taken them at first, and after a while I told them that I took them, they were given to me, and who the men were that gave them to me. I did not tell them the exact names of the parties, because I did not know what their names were, I only knew them working down there in the sheds. I told them that they told me to take the shoes. I told them they were two men working in the freight sheds, and they told me to take the shoes and dispose of them, and they told me who they were, I told them I did not know who they were, I would have to identify them, I did not know their names, who they were, I knew who they were. I stayed in jail until the following Monday, then I went down to the freight shed. I saw Mr. Redgate. I identified him as one of the men. I afterwards saw the other, Newman, in the city jail. Mr. Moore: Q. Was there also some conversation .in jail when you saw Redgate and Newman and the officers there after-wards ? A. Yes, they spoke of these two men being the men, and what they did with it, and told them to tell everything out, and all like that, that .was sort of really the conversation in substance, there was not much said. The Court: Q.

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Bluebook (online)
141 P. 1191, 24 Cal. App. 573, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redgate-v-southern-pacific-co-calctapp-1914.