S. H. Kress & Co. v. Lawrence

162 S.W. 448, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 157
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 448 (S. H. Kress & Co. v. Lawrence) 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
S. H. Kress & Co. v. Lawrence, 162 S.W. 448, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 157 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

WILLSON, C. J.

This was a suit for damages for false imprisonment, brought by ap-pellee against appellant, in which judgment was rendered in favor of the former against the latter for the sum of $1,000.

Appellant, a corporation, owned and operated a store in the city of Texarkana, where it kept for sale, displayed on open counters, accessible to persons who might wish to examine them, jewelry, toys, music, glassware, and innumerable other articles, ranging in price from 5 to 25 cents. Between 8 and 9 o’clock in the evening of Saturday, October 26, 1912, appellee, a boy 12 years of age, and his sister, a young lady 16 years of age, went to appellant’s said store, where ap-pellee’s sister bought some glass tumblers, which she gave to appellee to carry. She then proceeded to look at sheet music displayed in the rear end of the store, while ap-pellee went towards the front part of the store, stopping at a counter where a lot of cheap jewelry was displayed. Having completed her inspection of the music, appellee’s sister came to where he was and, touching him on the shoulder, told him to “come on, let’s go,” walking on towards the front door. Appellee followed after her and had reached a point near the door when appellant’s manager, Scott, and another of its employés, named James, described as a “floor man,” stopped him. Appellee’s account (testifying *450 as a witness) of what then occurred was as follows: “They (meaning Scott and James) caught me by the collar and back of the neck and said, ‘Where are you going with that pin in your pocket?’ I replied, T haven’t got any pin in my pocket.’ I had bought some candy in the store, a nickel’s worth. I had that candy in my pocket, right-hand pocket of my coat. The man then said, ‘Let’s go back here and see.’ He had me right by the back of my neck and pushed me through the store and through a big crowd of negroes at the back of the store, and he took me up some stair-steps and told me to turn all my pockets wrongside out, and I didn’t say anything. I had some candy in my pocket and X took it out and turned my pockets, and one of them said, ‘Any candy on the shelf that he could have stolen?’ and I said, ‘I never stole any candy;’ and he said: ‘I thought you had a pin in your pocket. You had better be careful how you handle things in this store. We catch many boys stealing.’ Then they told me I could go. That store runs from one block to the other, from the north side of Broad street clear back to the alley, something like 140 feet, and is 50 feet wide, two lots, and I was close, I guess five or six feet, to the west front door when the man caught me in the back of the neck by the collar. 1-Ie pushed me all along from the front of the store to the back of the store, and pushed me right through a big crowd of negroes along up the stairways. Both of them followed me to the back end of the store. They didn’t say anything to me when I was going from the front end of the store to the back end of the store. They didn’t tell me what they were taking me for. After they took me up the stairway they told me to turn all of my pockets wrongside out. I had four pockets in my pants, two side pockets and hip pockets, and I turned all of them wrongside out. I also had a little watch pocket, and I turned that wrongside out. They told me to turn every one of my pockets. I also turned my coat pockets. My coat had one pocket on each side, one side pocket on the outside and one pocket on the inside. I had the candy in the right-hand pocket of my coat. When I turned that the candy came down on the floor, and then I took everything out of the pocket and turned it. I set the glasses down on the floor. I carried the glasses up the stairs with me. When one of them asked me if there was any candy out on the shelf that I could have stolen, I said: ‘I didn’t steal this candy, I bought it.’ After they got through turning my pockets, they said: ‘We see you haven’t got the pin, but I thought I saw you put it in your pocket. You had better be careful how you handle things around here. We catch so many boys stealing.’ And said, ‘You can go now.’ Then I put everything back in my pockets and picked up the glasses and went home.” On his cross-examination ap-pellee testified: “These pins were just laid on the counter, open counter, and I picked up one of these pins and looked at it, and put it back. Q. Did you do that more than once? A. No, sir; I didn’t pick it up but once, just picked it up and looked at it and put it back. No boys were around there that I knew. I asked the young lady waiting on this counter how much the pins were, and. she said ten cents. She did not ask me if X wanted any. Q. Did she turn away? A. No, sir. The store was crowded and I asked this-young lady how much the pins were, and she told me ten cents. That was before I picked up one of them. Then I looked at them and she was still standing there watching me, and I put it back. I didn’t have any idea of taking one, and I was just looking at it. Q. Now is it possible that you looked at that twice, Clinton? A. No, sir; only once. Q. Perfectly sure of it? A. Yes, sir. Q. When the-young lady told you the price of the pin you picked it up and put it back, and then your sister came up and said, ‘Let’s go’? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now your sister left out the west door, and you were following her with the glasses, and you .say two men stopped you? A: Yes, sir. Q. And this was one of them (pointing to Mr. Scott)? A. Yes, sir. Just one of them got me by the collar. Q. Did Mr, Scott catch you by the collar? A. I think it was the other man. Q. Did Mr. Scott put his hands on you? A. Yes, sir; and when he told me to come on he took them oft'. Q. Did only one of them catch you by the collar? A. Yes, sir. Q. Where did the other one put his hands on you? A. Put his hand on my shoulder. Q. Which one-asked you about the pin? A. Mr. Scott. And I told him that I didn’t have any pin,, and he said, ‘Let’s go back and see.’ Q. Now you didn’t object to going back, did you? A. I knew I didn’t have the pin. Q. You preferred to show him that you didn’t have the pin, didn’t you, and you didn’t object, to going back there, did you? A. I didn’t want to go back there. I would rather have emptied my pockets right there and shown everybody that I didn’t have it. I asked them to let me empty my pockets there. I went back with them when they said, ‘Let’s go back and see.’ He caught hold to the collar of my waist and had his fingers on my neck. He didn’t have his hands on my shoulder. The other one had his hand on my shoulder; and Mr. Scott was the one who-did the talking. I am perfectly sure that they caught me by the collar, and I am perfectly sure that they pushed me down the-aisle. Q. Isn’t it a fact that when you were-first stopped Mr. Scott was not there? A. Both of them were there. I am perfectly sure of that. <¾. Now did he keep Ms hands on you until you started up the stairway? A. When we got to the stairway he turned, me loose and told me to turn all of my pockets out. Q. Did both men keep their hands- *451 on you when they were going down the aisle? | A. No, sir. Mr. Scott didn’t; the other man did, and pushed me through the middle of a crowd of negroes. Mr. Scott didn’t have his hands on me when we walked down the aisle. The other man was behind me and just used one hand holding my collar. Q. Now, were you on the east or west of him? A. In front of him; he was right behind me. He had one hand holding me by the collar and the other hand was on my body, and when I got up the stairs he told me to empty my pockets, and I turned them all out. I had some candy in one pocket. After they got through Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 448, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-h-kress-co-v-lawrence-texapp-1913.