Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Steele

130 S.W.2d 160, 23 Tenn. App. 275, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 12, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 160 (Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Steele, 130 S.W.2d 160, 23 Tenn. App. 275, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 34 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This is a suit for malicious prosecution instituted by George Steele against Sears, Roebuck & Company and another, A. D. Halmontaller, but pending the litigation the last named defendant was dismissed and he was used as a witness for the plaintiff. There was a verdict in the lower court in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $2500 and an appeal-in-error has been prosecuted to this court for a review.

The facts upon which the suit is based are as follows: Sears, Roebuck & Company is a foreign corporation with its home office in the city of Chicago; it is engaged in a nation-wide mercantile business, and has established chain stores throughout the country, and it is doing business in Tennessee by the operation of stores in the principal cities, one of its stores being located in Nashville, which is the one we are concerned with. The Nashville store is in charge of a manager, an assistant manager, a cashier, numerous clerks, and other employees. This store is engaged in the sale of merchandise at retail, and in the course of its business it accepts checks from its prospective customers in payment or in part-payment of their purchases, after the check has passed through the Credit Department and then approved by the officers, or the manager and assistant manager of the store, the assistant manager being in charge of the Credit Department. Many of these customers’ checks are approved and accepted during the course of business, and in the course of a week as many as ten or twelve checks are returned dishonored by the bank upon which they were drawn.

If a check is returned with the notation “Insufficient funds,” the assistant manager calls the party over the phone or writes a card conveying the information and requesting an immediate settlement. If no response is made to this communication the account, or check, *277 is then placed in the bands of a collector, selected by the manager of the store, and he calls upon the party who negotiated the check. If a reasonable excuse is given and indulgence is asked, time is extended in order that the party may make good the check. But if the check proves to be a forgery and the claim cannot be adjusted with the party against whose account it is drawn, then it is the rule of the company that the check be sent to the home office in Chicago and the local store hears nothing further from the matter.

The plaintiff, George Steele, operates a garage a few doors from the local store in Nashville, and maintains a pay roll of four or five employees, and he pays his employees by check. These checks are received after banking hours, and the employees cash a number of them with the defendant, Sears, Roebuck & Company, and in the past some of them have been returned unpaid, and the assistant manager, after taking the matter up with the plaintiff, had adjusted the claims with him. On January 27, 1936, the plaintiff issued a check to an employee, Robert Holmes, who had quit his employment before the regular pay day, and the check was issued for the wages due in the sum of $7.80, but postdated until February 1, 1936. This cheek was not completely filled out by Steele; the 'place where the figures are placed was left blank, and a sufficient space left between the word “seven” written out, and 80/100 in figures, to permit the holder to write in the word “seventeen,” and when he did this he wrote in the figures-$17.80 in the blank place above referred to. lie then took the check to Sears, Roebuck & Company and made a small purchase and received $17 in cash. This check went through the Credit Department before it was honored, and George Steele’s signature being well-known to the assistant manager, it received his O. K. It seems that no attention was paid to the alteration which is apparent upon the face of the check, it being written in different ink and not in the same handwriting. This check was deposited by the defendant but was returned by the bank with the notation that it was postdated. Steele was immediately communicated with, and asked to see the check when it was sent to him, and he brought it back to the place of business of the defendant, saying that the check had been raised, and offered to pay the $7.80 for which it was first written. The assistant manager took the position that Steele had been so careless in writing the check that he made it possible for the employee to raise it, and for this reason Steele should bear the loss. Steele declined to pay the full amount of the raised check, and the assistant manager told him that he would prosecute him if he did not pay the check.

The manager of this store had employed a deputy sheriff as a collecting agent for the store, in whose hands he placed for collection these returned checks, paying him twenty-five per cent of the amount collected. The deputy sheriff collected additional compensation by *278 serving tbe papers in the civil suits and collecting officer’s fees; and the agent states that he gave notice and took out criminal processes and collected the additional official fee incident to the criminal prosecutions. He states that he instituted fifty or more criminal prosecutions upon these returned checks, collecting the checks, retaining his compensation, together with his official fee. The company’s records show that he was paid his commission, that is the twenty-five per cent, by a voucher drawn upon the company, after he had paid in the collection to the company. And that the vouchers show only two collections made by his agent. This is a disputed fact which cannot concern us here. We adopt the theory that he made as many collections as he stated he did.

This disputed check was soon thereafter placed in the hands of the collecting agent and deputy sheriff, and being unable to collect the same by solicitation, he gave the three days’ notice and instituted a criminal prosecution against Steele, under the so-called "bad check” statute, codified in the Code, Section 11157, and at the same time instituted a civil suit before a Justice of the Peace to reduce the cheek to judgment. In the meantime, the agent’s commission as a deputy sheriff had been recalled or surrendered, and the papers were served by other officers. Steele was arrested and brought before a Justice of the Peace and his case was bound over to the Grand Jury; he was retained for a period of three hours, pending the execution of bond, and at the time of his retention his father was fatally ill at the hospital, and he had been humiliated in being arrested in his place of business and in the presence of his employees. The collecting agent did not appear before the Grand Jury, and no true bill was found against Steele.

After this prosecution was terminated, Steele, through his attorney, sent a check for $7.80 to the defendant company, in satisfaction of the amount due upon the check; the manager of the company accepted the check, writing that it had been received as a credit upon the cheek originally issued and cashed by it. After this communication was received, this suit was instituted for the malicious prosecution of the plaintiff, Steele, by the defendant, Sears, Roebuck & Company, and its agent, Ilalmontaller.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 160, 23 Tenn. App. 275, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-roebuck-co-v-steele-tennctapp-1939.