Simmons v. JC Penney Company
This text of 186 So. 2d 358 (Simmons v. JC Penney Company) 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.
Opinion
Mrs. Mildred SIMMONS
v.
J. C. PENNEY COMPANY et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*359 Arthur Cobb, Baton Rouge, for appellant.
David M. Ellison, Jr., of Taylor, Porter, Brooks, Fuller & Phillips, Baton Rouge, for appellees.
Before ELLIS, LOTTINGER, LANDRY, REID and BAILES, JJ.
LOTTINGER, Judge.
This is a tort action in which the plaintiff, Mrs. Mildred Simmons, instituted suit against J. C. Penney Company and its liability insurer, The Travelers Insurance Company, seeking to recover damages for false arrest, embarrassment, humiliation defamation of character, unwarranted invasion of privacy and injury to character alleged to have arisen out of an incident which occurred on or near the premises of the defendant, J. C. Penney Company, on December 21, 1963. The plaintiff alleged that on that date, and as she was emerging from the J. C. Penney Delmont Village Store, she was accosted by a store employee and accused of shoplifting. In their answer the defendants entered a general denial and affirmatively alleged that on the date in question, a department manager had detained for questioning for a brief period of time on the premises of J. C. Penney Company, the plaintiff, Mrs. Mildred Simmons, a person who the manager had reasonable grounds to believe had committed a theft of goods for sale by the company. The defendants *360 specifically pleaded that any questioning and/or detention of the plaintiff was privileged and authorized under the provisions of R.S. 15:84.5, subd. A and R.S. 15:84.6. The defendants further specifically pleaded the immunity from civil liability granted a merchant or a merchant's employee by R.S. 15:84.6.
In accordance with the prayer of the plaintiff's petition, the case was regularly tried before a civil jury on November 20, 1964, and at the conclusion of the trial and argument of counsel, the jury returned a unanimous verdict for the defendants, dismissing plaintiff's suit at her cost. The plaintiff thereafter filed a timely application for a new trial, which, after oral argument, was denied by the Trial Judge. The plaintiff thereafter perfected a devolutive appeal to this Court.
In his brief, counsel for appellants sets forth but one assignment of error, and that is that the Trial Judge was in error in instructing the jury that R.S. 15:84.5, subds. A, B and R.S. 15:84.6 were applicable to this case. Counsel makes the statement that these statutes are only applicable where a person is detained on the premises and that they do not apply to the instance where a detention occurs on the sidewalk outside of the store proper.
The record shows that on December 21, 1963, the plaintiff and her married daughter went shopping at the J. C. Penney Company Delmont Village Store in the City of Baton Rouge. After remaining in the store for a brief period of time Mrs. Simmons decided to leave and shop elsewhere. On her way out of the store, she walked by a small counter of hairbrushes, reached down and touched one or more of them, suddenly raised her hand and closed her overcoat tightly around her, all of this being done with one continuous motion, and while she was walking toward the exit of the store, which was a short distance away. She and her daughter went through the door, and while on that portion of the sidewalk immediately in front of the store, which was covered by the canopy of the store, was stopped by Mr. R. Dale Brock, a department manager of the defendant. He told her that he thought she had a brush under her coat, whereupon the plaintiff opened her coat and Mr. Brock started to walk back into the store. The plaintiff called him back and insisted that he look in her purse, which she proceeded to open, despite the fact that Mr. Brock informed her that he was not interested in looking at her purse.
Thereafter, Mr. Brock went into the store, and the plaintiff, according to her testimony, proceeded away from the store toward her automobile, changed her mind, turned and went back into the store and asked to see the manager.
Mr. Brock, who had stopped her outside and Mr. Larsen, a detective with the City of Baton Rouge, who was employed during the holidays as a part time store detective for J. C. Penney Company, both talked with Mrs. Simmons. There is some conflict in the record as to whether or not Mr. Larsen was represented to Mrs. Simmons to be the Manager of the Store, but we believe this to be immaterial. In the presence of Mr. Brock and Mr. Larsen, the plaintiff then proceeded to attempt to tear her J. C. Penney Company credit card, stating that she had not stolen anything, and that she wanted to tear her credit card because she was never going to buy anything from Penney's again. At that time there was a small group of people watching, one of whom verified the conversation which took place between Mrs. Simmons, Mr. Brock, and Mr. Larsen.
Mrs. Simmons claims that she was laughed at when she attempted to tear the credit card and that this caused her humiliation, etc. We note that after the initial encounter between Mr. Brock and Mrs. Simmons on the sidewalk just outside of the J. C. Penney Company store, Mrs. Simmons and her daughter both understood that they were free to leave. Mr. Brock had already reentered the store. We do not believe that Mrs. Simmons' claim for any *361 humiliation or embarrassment which occurred after she reentered the store is well founded by reason of the fact that she herself initiated the second encounter and also by reason of the fact that according to the record, she was not ridiculed, humiliated or embarrassed in this second encounter. Indeed, the record discloses that she did substantially all of the talking while Mr. Brock and Mr. Larsen simply stood by and watched her futile efforts to tear her credit card. Mrs. Simmons and Mr. Larsen both testified that Mr. Larsen told her, in the course of her efforts to tear the card, that she would not be able to tear it because it was constructed of heavy plastic material.
Let us now consider appellant's claim that the authority to detain and question a person together with the immunity from the liability granted to merchants by R.S. 15:84.5 and R.S. 15:84.6 applies only to the situation where the detention is accomplished on the merchants' premises. It is admitted by all parties and the record clearly shows that the initial detention or contract between Mr. Brock and Mrs. Simmons took place on the sidewalk just outside the entrance door of the J. C. Penney Company, and on the portion of the sidewalk which was covered by a canopy attached to the J. C. Penney Store. R.S. 15:84.5 provides as follows:
A. "A peace officer, or a merchant, or a merchants' specifically authorized employee, may use reasonable force to detain for questioning for a length of time, not to exceed sixty minutes, on the merchant's premises any person whom he has reasonable ground to believe has committed theft of goods displayed for sale by the merchant, regardless of the actual value of such goods, and such detention shall not constitute an arrest. Willful concealment of goods either inside or outside the store of the merchant is prima facie evidence of intent to steal and permanently deprive the owner of his goods.
B. A peace officer may arrest without warrant any person whom he has reasonable ground to believe has committed theft of goods displayed for sale, regardless of the actual value of such goods. A charge made to a peace officer by a merchant or a merchant's employee shall constitute reasonable grounds for such arrest."
R.S.
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186 So. 2d 358, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-jc-penney-company-lactapp-1966.