Rogers v. Industrial Rice Mills

292 S.W. 944
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 1927
DocketNo. 8889.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 944 (Rogers v. Industrial Rice Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Industrial Rice Mills, 292 S.W. 944 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is a suit by W. H. Rogers, hereinafter styled appellant, against the Industrial Rice Mills and J. J. Whatley, hereinafter styled appellees, to recover damages for slander, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution. The following statement of the substance of plaintiff’s petition is copied from his brief:

“He alleged, in substance, that he was a good, true, and honest citizen, and always had been; that he maintained himself by honest employment and attention to business, and had the respect and esteem of his business associates and other good citizens, and that he had never been guilty of the atrocious crime of theft, nor of receiving and concealing stolen property, all of which was well known to the defendants in error; that the defendants, maliciously and willfully contriving to injure the plaintiff, in the city of Houston, and in the presence of a large number of people, the said J. J. Whatley acting for himself and as the agent of the industrial Rice Mills, and in plaintiffs place of business, declaring of and concerning certain flour sacks which had been unlawfully removed from the premises of plaintiff, that ‘they are the property of the Industrial Rice Mills and we want them’ (meaning thereby that plaintiff had unlawfully obtained possession of said property and was unlawfully concealing the same), thereby caused the arrest of the plaintiff and his subsequent confinement in jail; that, after plaintiff was placed under arrest, he was marched through the streets of Houston, in charge of the officers, in view of k great number of people, during all of which time the defendants were present and acquiesced in what said officers did and were doing to plaintiff, well knowing plaintiff’s innocence; that, notwithstanding plaintiff’s innocence, defendants caused and permitted the officers to put plaintiff in jail for a long time, and thereafter had him brought before- the courts to answer the charge of receiving and concealing stolen property, at which trial the defendant J. J. Whatley appeared and prosecuted the plaintiff on said charge, the defendant (plaintiff in error) being acquitted. He alleged that he did not receive and conceal said flour sacks; that they were given him by one of the agents of the defendants, all of which was known to the defendants, and that they did not have lawful or probable cause to make said slanderous statements charging plaintiff with said crime, and maliciously depriving him of his liberty and maliciously prosecuting him; that, by reason of said wrongful, malicious, and willful acts of the defendants, plaintiff has been, by a large number of his neighbors and friends, suspected of being guilty of said wrongdoing, and has lost their good will, esteem, etc., and has been forced to spend time and money in vindicating himself, etc., and that he was greatly humiliated and suffered great mental pain and disquietude, to his damage in the sum of $30,000; that, by reason of said matters and things, a great number of his customers and business associates had withdrawn their trade, etc., to his damage in the sum of $20,000.”

The defendants answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, and general denial, and, further, specially pleaded the facts as subsequently shown on the trial by the uncontradicted testimony and hereinafter set out; and averred that, if defendant Whatley, individually or as president of the defendant corporation, used the slanderous words concerning plaintiff alleged in the petition, or caused the arrest and prosecution of plaintiff as alleged, such utterances and acts and conduct of defendants were made and done in good faith; “that the defendant J. J. What-ley saw such sacks of the Industrial Rice Mills in plaintiff’s premises and possession; that at the time he was and is now the president of the Industrial Rice Mills, and, as such, had a personal interest in said sacks and in making said utterances and his conduct in causing the arrest and restraint of plaintiff in his liberty was in the discharge of a legal, moral, and social obligation to the public, and in the conduct of his own affairs, or in one or more, or all, of said matters, and that the said utterances and conduct in causing the arrest and restraining of plaintiff in his liberty were made to officers of Harris county, Tex., duly commissioned and acting as such and who had a corresponding interest or duty to receive said utterances and to arrest and restrain the said plaintiff in his liberty, and therefore the said utterances or conduct of defendants in causing the arrest and restraining of plaintiff in his liberty were a privileged communication.”

After hearing the evidence, the trial court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of defendants, and upon return of such verdict rendered judgment in accordance therewith. Appellant assails this judgment upon the ground that the evidence raised the issues of slander and malicious prosecution as charged in the petition, and therefore the trial court erred in not submitting each of these issues to the jury.

The evidence shows that on March 16th several police officers of the city of Houston,, with two boys accompanying them, went to plaintiff’s place of business, searching for a stolen bicycle. In making this search one of the .officers, Mr. Bryson, observed a flour sack, with the name “Industrial Rice Mills”printed thereon, protruding from a partly open trunk in which there were a number of ■ other sacks. What followed this discovery, and the .circumstances under which the alleged slanderous statement was made, is thus detailed by the plaintiff:

*946 “When they found the sacks Mr. Bryson took one of them and went out of the door, presumably to the rice mill, at least that is what he said. When he' came back he said Hr. Whatley claimed those" sacks belonged to him-, and I told him that the sacks belonged to me; that the_miller had given them to me. I made that statement to Mr. Bryson. Bryson asked me if I would go and tell Mr. Whatley that, and I told him I would, and I went over there with Bryson and told Mr. Whatley. There was not any other officer present at that time. Anderson and Gresham were over there at the rice mill when we got over there. X went over there with Officer Bryson. That was after they had found the sacks. We didn’t take but one sack over there to the rice mill. When we got over there at the rice mill I told Mr. Whatley in the presence of Mr. Bryson where I had gotten the sacks; that I had gotten them from Mr. Curtis. * * * At that time Mr. Bryson asked me where I got the sacks, and I told him X got them from Mr. Curtis, and Mr. Whatley turned to Curtis and asked him if he had given me the sacks, and Curtis denied giving them to me, and I told him we wouldn’t argue about it. At that time Mr. Whatley said the sacks belonged to him and he wanted them, and Anderson, Bryson, Whatley, and I went back to the shop, and Mr. Whatley got the sacks and took, them over to the rice mill. Mr. Whatley took the sacks out of the trunk, I am sure of that. After that Bryson, Anderson, and I sat in the office, and they called up over the telephone, and we sat there and talked for awhile, and then we went back to the rice mill, and by the time we got there the sacks had been counted, and Mr. Whatley told them how many sacks there' were, and Bryson said: ‘As long as you claim these sacks are yours I am going to file a complaint against Rogers for receiving and concealing stolen property.’ Bryson then took me on to town, and Mr. Whatley was not with us thereafter. He was not there any more until the trial came up in court.”

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292 S.W. 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-industrial-rice-mills-texapp-1927.