Sargent v. Polar Bar Ice Cream Co.

196 So. 541, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 89
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 1940
DocketNo. 17223.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 So. 541 (Sargent v. Polar Bar Ice Cream Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent v. Polar Bar Ice Cream Co., 196 So. 541, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 89 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit for damages for malicious prosecution. The defendants a.re the Polar Bar Ice Cream Company, Inc., and John C. Selway, the manager of its peddlers’ sales department.

It is charged by plaintiff, Lee E. Sargent, an ice cream peddler, that Selway, in his said capacity, with malice and without probable cause for believing in his guilt, caused his arrest and charged him with petty larceny. It is also alleged that petitioner subsequently was acquitted.

Defendants admit that they were responsible for Sargent’s arrest, but they aver that they had good reason to believe in his guilt and that there was no malice involved in their action. By reconventionál demand defendant, Polar Bar Ice Cream Company, Inc., claims of plaintiff $10.35, alleging that amount to be due by him.for “merchandise taken out by him * * * and for which he has failed to account”.

In the court below, on the first trial, there was judgment for plaintiff for $200 against both defendants and, on the recon-ventional demand, there was judgment in favor of the Polar Bar Ice Cream Company and against Sargent in the sum of $10.35. But on application of defendants, a new trial was had, after which judgment was rendered for defendants dismissing plaintiff’s suit and, on the reconventionál demand, in favor of Polar Bar Ice Cream Company, Inc., and against Sargent in the sum of $9.35. Sargent has appealed.

The Polar Bar Ice Cream Company, Inc., is engaged in the distribution of an ice cream confection which is retailed through peddlers to the general public on the streets and particularly at athletic and other events at which the public congregates. Selway is manager of the peddlers’ sales department. Sargent, who apparently was well known in that particular trade, at various times had peddled the products of other companies engaged in the same kind of business, and, at intervals during the three years preceding his arrest, had peddled the product of the Polar Bar Company. The company, according to its custom, provided him with a tricycle to which was attached an insulated ice-box, in which, by means of what is called “dry ice”, this ice cream might be kept hard and salable.

The company contends that it did not sell these confections to Sargent and to the other peddlers because they had no financial standing and no credit, but that it consigned its product to them to be sold by them for its account and with the understanding that, at the end of each day, each peddler must return his tricycle and the money collected for that day’s sales, out of which money each might then retain that share which had been earned by him.

Sargent asserts that, on the contrary, the contract was not one of consignment, but was an outright sale on credit for the period of one day, with the legal result that failure to turn over the money collected in any one day did not amount to a criminal conversion or embezzlement, but only involved civil liability for debt for the purchase price of the product.

On the morning of December 22, 1938, Sargent obtained a tricycle and a full supply of ice cream bars, but on that evening he did not return to the office of the company, and, in fact, no official of that company, nor anyone else connected with it— so far as the record shows — heard of him or from him until December 28th, six da'ys later. On that day, fearing that he had stolen the tricycle and either the ice cream bars or the money for which they had been sold, Selway called on the bicycle theft department of the city police for assistance in recovering the tricycle. He made no charge against Sargent, but merely sought advice as to the proper course to pursue. He was advised to locate Sargent and to demand the return of the tricycle. Sargent was not found at the address which he had given to the company, but his “landlady” advised Selway of his correct address and Selway called at his home, but found that he was not in. On the next day, December 29th, Selway called again and this time he found Sargent, who readily surrendered the tricycle and who agreed that he was indebted to the company, but disputed the correctness of the amount claimed. He promised to call at the office the next day to settle the account, but did not do so. On January 2, 1939, while Sargent, at the entrance to the stadium in which a large football game had been played, was engaged in selling the product of a rival company, Selway caused his arrest, advising policd officers who were present that at one of the precinct sta *543 tions in this city there was a warrant for him based on his failure to account for $10.35 claimed by the company as the amount due it for money collected by him for its account. Sargent was taken in to custody, placed in a jail cell, where he remained for about an hour and a half, and was taken to another station and was then released on bond. It was discovered that no charge had previously been made against him and Selway then caused him to be charged with petty larceny. On the next morning his bondsman surrendered him, he was tried and acquitted, and this suit has resulted.

Of course, the acquittal does not itself entitle him to recovery, for there can be no recovery of damages for malicious prosecution unless it appears that the said prosecution was instigated by malice and was not based on information or facts sufficient to justify a bona fide belief in the guilt of the accused — in other words, unless there was malice and no probable cause for believing in his guilt. Sundmaker v. Gaudet, 113 La. 887, 37 So. 865; Washington v. Lane Cotton Mills Company, 154 La. 910, 98 So. 416; Barrios v. Yoars, La.App., 184 So. 212.

It seems evident that under no circumstances could a charge of petty larceny have been sustained. There is no doubt that Sargent had properly and legally come into possession of the merchandise and of the money for which he sold it, and it necessarily follows that, if he had been guilty of any crime at all, it must have been embezzlement and this only if his contract was not one of sale, but one of consignment. •

However, we attach no significance to this because, if Selway had probable cause for believing Sargent guilty of a crime, we do not think it would make any difference in a suit of this kind that he had made a charge of larceny when, technically, the charge should have been embezzlement.

But we do think it important that no charge was made until Sargent was found several days later and at a football game, selling the merchandise of a rival concern. Selway had found out where Sargent lived and made no further effort to contact him. In fact, on December 29th, he agreed that Sargent might come in on the next day and pay the amount which he owed. Though Sargent did not come in as he promised, he says that he did appear a day or so later and again disputed the correctness of the claim of the company. This is denied by Selway, but we think that the record shows that Selway, by his conduct, agreed that Sargent might have additional time to pay such amount as he owed.

However improper or illegal may have been the original action of Sargent in retaining the money, in extending him time to settle the. account Selway converted the matter into a simple debtor and creditor transaction and after that he must have known that he could not invoke criminal proceedings. Then, too, we are impressed by the testimony of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 541, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-v-polar-bar-ice-cream-co-lactapp-1940.