S. H. Kress & Co. v. Musgrove

149 S.E. 453, 153 Va. 348, 1929 Va. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 19, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 149 S.E. 453 (S. H. Kress & Co. v. Musgrove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia 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. Musgrove, 149 S.E. 453, 153 Va. 348, 1929 Va. LEXIS 269 (Va. 1929).

Opinion

Campbell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of trespass on the case brought by A. L. Musgrove against S. H. Kress, a corporation, to recover damages for false arrest and assault and battery. The notice of motion contains two counts. The first count charges that plaintiff “Through one of its agents, servants or employees * * * did, with force and arms, assault complainant with great force and violence seized and laid hold of the plaintiff, shook and pulled plaintiff about its store in the presence of his friends and acquaintances. * * * By reason of which plaintiff claimed to have sustained damages to the amount of $2,500.00.” In the second count, the plaintiff charged that “S. H. Kress and Company assaulted, seized and laid hold of plaintiff' with great force and violence and pulled him about the said store, dragged him along and down the aisles of the-said store and did unlawfully arrest and detain the said plaintiff until the door of the defendant’s store was. reached when he was pushed and shoved into the-street. By reason of which he was greatly humiliated and exposed to injury; that his credit and standing in. the community was greatly injured.”

[351]*351The defendant appeared and plead not guilty, the case was tried by a jury and a verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $750.00, upon which the •court entered judgment.

The testimony for the plaintiff may be summarized thus: The defendant was the operator of a large five and ten-eent store in the city of Roanoke. The plaintiff, a- young man of good character and an employee of the Appalachian Power Company, on the night of December 3, 1927, entered the store with the previously announced intention of buying a six foot ruler. He was accompanied to the store by a companion named Burnett. While standing in the aisle talking to an acquaintance, W. B. Johnson, a plain •clothes watchman in the employ of defendant, came up to plaintiff, caught him in the back of the coat, pulled him around and said to plaintiff: “Come here.” Johnson did not disclose his identity to plaintiff at the time he accosted him, nor did he inform him of the reason for ordering him out of the store. After walking a distance of approximately twenty-five feet, plaintiff said to Johnson: “What do you want?” Johnson replied: “You get out of here.” Plaintiff disclaimed any .improper conduct upon his part and requested iihat he be permitted to leave the store by way of the ■front door. This request Johnson denied, touched him on, or caught him by the arm and said: “No, you ain’t, .you are going out of this door,” and “shoved” him towards the door. When they reached the back door of the store, Johnson put his hand on plaintiff and “shoved” him out of the store. In reply to the question of plaintiff: “Wait a minute, I want you to tell me what this is for,” Johnson answered: “No argument,” and •slammed the door in plaintiff’s face. Plaintiff further stated that immediately after the affair he came again [352]*352to the front door of the store and notified an employee of the store of the treatment he had received, but no apology had ever been offered him,. This occurrence took place within a period of approximately five minutes. The plaintiff was corroborated in his version of the main affair by five disinterested witnesses. As a result of this alleged humiliating experience plaintiff testified:

“It made me feel, when I found out that he was putting m.e out; it made me feel like everybody was gazing at me, thinking that 1 was a rogue, or a thief, or shoplifting, or drunk or something, and I couldn’t sleep at night and I cannot sleep now; and the last thing when I go to bed I think about how the people look at me and say: ‘There goes the fellow that w*‘as throwed out of the store, he was drunk or he was a rogue.’

“Q. Did the people gaze at you in the store?

“A. Yes, sir.

“There were a number of people in there that you personally did not know?

“A. Certainly there was.

“Q. Have you ever been arrested for anything in your life?

“A. No, sir; I have not. This is the first time I have ever been into anything.”

Johnson’s account of the occurrence is as follows :

“Q. Now, Mr. Musgrove here claims that you took hold of him about, I think he fixed the time, about quarter to nine on the evening of December 3rd, in the store. Will you. kindly relate to the jury now just as nearly as you can what took place on that occasion?

“A. Well, I expect it was in the neighborhood of between eight-thirty and nine o’clock-that-this gentleman and another man was standing-at the counter [353]*353practically, I thought, molesting the girls or talking to them.. I expect they were there about ten or fifteen or twenty minutes and I passed a remark to them; I said: ‘Boys, don’t molest the girls like that’ and the other gentleman that was with him, he turned and walked through the store and went out. Mr. Musgrove turned around and he said: T think you are a little too smart any way.’ I didn’t know what his name was but I said to him: T think the best thing for you to do is to go out of the store, and the quickest way is the best way,’ so he said: ‘I will go that way’ and the store was crowded towards Campbell avenue, and I said: ‘No, you are going out of the back door,’ so he turned and I just reached and touched him by the arm and said: ‘We*will go out of the back door’ and he started arguing, and I said: ‘No argument at all’ and when he went out he asked me out to argue it, and I said: ‘No argument.’ ”

In his further examination in chief Johnson denied that he had pulled or “shoved” plaintiff at any time, but did state that he “took hold of his arm” and escorted him to the back door. Upon his cross-examination, Johnson enlarged his account of the occurrence by stating that when he warned plaintiff not to molest the girls, that plaintiff retorted: “You are too -■ fresh.” In this statement he was contradicted by three witnesses introduced in rebuttal by plaintiff, as well as by two young lady employees introduced as witnesses for the defendant. The young lady whom Johnson claimed was molested by plaintiff was not introduced as a witness as it was alleged that she could not be located in the city. The record fails, however, to show the issuance of a subpoena for this witness and the legal presumption is that she would not have corroborated Johnson’s statement had she been present.

[354]*354Upon conclusion of the evidence the plaintiff offered and the court, over the objection of defendant, gave the following instructions:

“The court instructs the jury that neither malice, ill-will nor the slightest wrongful intention is necessary to maintain the action for false imprisonment, and that neither the good faith of the defendant or its employees will defeat the plaintiff’s right to recover. Therefore, if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was wrongfully detained as defined in instruction No. 2, you must find for the plaintiff and fix his damages at such sum as will compensate him for the suffering, both mental and physical, which he sustained by such wrongful acts, not to exceed the sum of 82,500.00.

. 2. “The court instructs the jury that false imprisonment is the restraint of one’s liberty, without any sufficient legal excuse therefor, by words or acts which he fears to disregard, and neither malice, ill-will, nor the slightest wrongful intention is necessary to constitute the offense.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.E. 453, 153 Va. 348, 1929 Va. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-h-kress-co-v-musgrove-va-1929.