Shields v. Patterson

97 Pa. Super. 398, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 14, 1929
DocketAppeal 90
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 97 Pa. Super. 398 (Shields v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shields v. Patterson, 97 Pa. Super. 398, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

Two of the three appellant defendants, Patterson Brothers, are partners conducting a dry-goods store in Butler; the third, B. O. Patterson, son of one of the others, is employed by them as credit manager. They appeal from judgment on a verdict in a suit brought by a married woman for malicious prosecution on the charge of larceny by bailee.

In 1919 and 1920, she obtained from Patterson Brothers a lot of household goods (rug's, blankets, pillows, mattress, etc.) priced at $379.46; she paid down $118, and agreed to pay the balance “$10.00 on the pay day of each and every two weeks thereafter at their stores ......” pursuant to the term's of a *400 so-called bailment lease stating their contract. By-February, 1923, she had paid only $181.50 and was in default. R. O. Patterson, in the performance of the duties of his employment, then called to see her and demanded payment of amounts due, and she informed him that as her husband was out of work and in a hospital under treatment for injury sustained in the coal mines, she (in the words of her testimony) “could not make the payments. He [R. O. Patterson] said, ‘If you can’t make the payments I will have to come and get the furniture.’ I said, ‘You can have it because I can’t pay.’ ” She adds that he refused to take it. From that time until during 1928, no collector called on her; R. O. Patterson testified that he did not know where she lived; that, in violation of the contract she had moved without notice; she testified that when she moved she telephoned that fact to defendants and during all that period she lived in Butler or North Butler.

The prosecution was begun by information made by R. O. Patterson on June 7, 1928, and on that day a warrant issued for her arrest. Pursuant to that warrant, and apparently in consequence of notice to her by the constable that she was required to appear before an aldprman, she appeared in September, 1928. There were two meetings in the alderman’s office at which her default was the subject of discussion, before the meeting at which she was committed. The aider-man testified “She appeared with counsel and I think it was just continued pending settlement.” At the last appearance in October, a hearing was waived and she was held in $500 bail and, in default of bail, was committed to jail. After being in jail about an hour her father-in-law became surety and she was released.

In disposing of the assignments to the refusal to direct a verdict for defendants we take the oral evidence and inference's therefrom favorable to plaintiff *401 and reject what is unfavorable to her. The jury may have found from the evidence that in the alderman’s office, E. O. Patterson said to her husband (as he testified) that unless he furnished the “balance on my wife’s bill that they claimed she owed them......” “they would put her in jail;” that he offered to pay $12 a month but his offer was declined. He states that the hearing was adjourned “to see if I could get the money;” he could not, and the commitment followed. The plaintiff also testified that E. O. Patterson stated in the alderman’s office that if the account was not paid she would be put in jail.

In the criminal trial E. O. Patterson testified that he had never made a demand on her for the return of the goods — that what he had demanded was payment of the amount due. In view of that testimony, the court (the same learned judge who presided in the trial now under review), being of opinion that a wilful failure to return the goods was not shown by mere demand of payment without a demand for the return of goods themselves, directed the jury to find a verdict of not guilty.

Appellants contend that the court erred in declining to charge as requested that there was wilful failure to return the goods (see Act of May 5, 1927, P. L. 776, amending See. 108 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382), if she did not return them “at the end of the lease period as agreed upon in the lease......” The request was affirmed with the qualification “if by the word wilful we are to understand that she failed to return the goods after demand made upon her for their return. ’ ’ The record required that qualification. The evidence is that in 1920 she paid only $62 and in 1922 only $15;.in 1921 she paid nothing; in 1923 during the month of January she paid only $10. Her evidence that Patterson refused to take the goods back and in February, 1923, demanded rent has been referred to; *402 the term prescribed in the lease was then long past; he testified “at the time he [plaintiff’s husband] was out of work Ave continued their payment ......“frequently when people are sick or out of work we continue over a period of time that they do not make payment. ’ ’ The right of strict performance was waived by defendants. In view of Patterson’s oato. evidence, there could be no conversion Avithout a demand for the goods for until then how was plaintiff to know that defendants had Avithdrawn their acquiescence in her retention of the goods notwithstanding her non-payment of rent on the due-dates ?

Another complaint is that the court qualified a request to charge that if plaintiff “disposed of any of this property without the knoAvledge or consent of the defendants then there is a fraudulent conversion and there can be no recovery,” by affirming “if by the word disposed” it is meant that plaintiff undertook to sell the property or convert it into money or to conceal it, but if it simply refers to disposing of it by reason of it's being worn out, we think the point should not be affirmed ......” There is evidence that some of the articles, 3 rugs, 1 spring, a pair of blankets,' an aluminum set, were worn out and throAvn away and for the same reason a mattress was burned. The contract expressly exempted plaintiff from liability for loss or damage to the goods by “ordinary wear.” She testified that these articles were worn out in that Avay, and was therefore not liable for them because the contract expressly exempted her; there is no evidence of any other disposition to which the requested instruction applied.

The two partners contend that they had no part in the prosecution, and that judgment should be -reversed as to them. We have examined the record in the light of the argument of the learned counsel for appellants, but cannot accept that vieAV, It is based on the theory *403 that R. O. Patterson, the credit manager, acted without authority express or implied in conducting the prosecution. “The general rule is that the act of the agent becomes that of the principal only when expressly authorized or when his authority to act may fairly be inferred from the nature and scope of the employment.” Markley v. Snow, 207 Pa. 447; see also Dunne v. R. R. Co., 249 Pa. 76, 81; Blaker v. Elec. Co., 60 Pa. Superior Ct. 56, 59. The jury had the following evidence given by R. O. Patterson on which to find that both partners were bound by what their agent did.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 Pa. Super. 398, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-patterson-pasuperct-1929.