Simpson v. Montgomery Ward & Co.

68 A.2d 442, 165 Pa. Super. 408, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 482
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 13, 1949
DocketAppeal, 21
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 A.2d 442 (Simpson v. Montgomery Ward & Co.) 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
Simpson v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 68 A.2d 442, 165 Pa. Super. 408, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 482 (Pa. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rhodes, P. J.,

This is the third appeal after the third trial of an action in trespass for malicious prosecution. Simpson v. Montgomery Ward & Company, 354 Pa. 87, 46 A. 2d 674; Simpson v. Montgomery Ward & Company, 162 Pa. Superior Ct. 371, 57 A. 2d 571. The jury again found for the plaintiff, and defendant has appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict. We shall set forth the evidence presented on the third trial to show the circumstances out of which the prosecution arose and the sharp conflict in the respective versions of what occurred.

Plaintiff testified that, with her mother and two children, she drove from their farm in Beaver County to Butler on the afternoon of July 13, 1944. One of the purposes of the trip was to purchase a pair of white arch support shoes for the mother. Plaintiff left her children in her parked car on Jefferson Street and proceeded with her mother to defendant’s store on Main Street. After entering the store the mother tried on shoes while plaintiff looked for the right size at a bargain rack at a nearby table. On the way to the shoe department plaintiff had purchased a paper of safety pins which she placed in her paper shopping bag and for which she had a sales slip. A clerk in the shoe department of defendant’s store, Mrs. Dona Yarger McCall, *410 assisted plaintiff’s mother, in trying on shoes. While the clerk was waiting on plaintiff’s mother, plaintiff returned to the parked car where she had left the children. Upon her return plaintiff met her mother coming out of the store and persuaded her to reenter and make another attempt to obtain shoes that would be satisfactory. The mother was unable to obtain any that were suitable. They thereupon left the shoe department and started to walk up the mezzanine stairs to the furniture department, but upon realizing that the hour was late they turned back and walked out of the store. They had just left the store and were walking down the street when an unidentified man (later shown to be H. F. Bechtel, defendant’s employe and assistant manager) stepped in front of plaintiff and demanded that she produce a pair of white shoes or a sales slip. He also demanded that plaintiff show him the contents of her shopping bag, and stated that he would call the police if she refused. Plaintiff testified that thereupon another individual, later identified as Harry W. Holliday, manager of the men’s department of defendant’s store, came out of the store. Bechtel, as yet unidentified to plaintiff, told Holliday to call the police. Bechtel followed plaintiff and her mother down the street to their parked car, and did not allow them to get out of his sight.

At the car the Chief of Police of Butler, Clarence E. Fend, identified himself to plaintiff, and at his request she handed her shopping bag to him for examination. Fend took the shopping bag and proceeded with plaintiff in her car to the police station. An examination of her shopping bag révealed nothing except her purse and the package of safety pins for which she had a sales slip. Plaintiff was held for questioning. Later Bechtel •brought in a bag containing items of children’s clothing; there were no sales slips with this merchandise which was identified as having come from defendant’s store. *411 Bechtel accused plaintiff of having left this bag in a fitting room in the store. Plaintiff denied that the bag belonged to her or that she had been in a fitting room in the store. Bechtel stated that if plaintiff would pay for the merchandise in this bag, having a value of about $15, he would drop the whole matter. Plaintiff refused to pay for the goods or to sign a confession. She was allowed to leave the police station to return to her home on her promise to appear again on the next morning. Plaintiff and her mother returned to the police station the next morning, July 14th.

Plaintiff was present at the hearing on the morning of July 14th with her counsel. H. F. Bechtel, defendant’s assistant manager, Harry W. Holliday, manager of the men’s department, J. J. Burns, manager of the shoe department, and Mrs. Donna Yarger McCall, a clerk in the shoe department, all employes of defendant at the time, testified at the preliminary hearings. Plaintiff was committed on July 14,1944, on a charge of larceny, and on August 22, 1944, she was held for the grand jury. At the police station plaintiff heard Mrs. McCall ask Bechtel if they should tell the chief of police about the shoes they found under the counter during the night, and that Bechtel told Mrs. McCall to keep quiet about it. According to plaintiff, Bechtel expressly stated that she had taken a pair of shoes and “the small stuff,” and that he wanted her held on a larceny charge. Plaintiff, who was pregnant at the time, was finger printed and photographed by the state police and committed to jail, where she became ill and required medical attention. There was corroboration of plaintiff’s testimony.

The testimony of defendant’s employes was at variance with that of the plaintiff in many respects. Mrs. McCall, a clerk in defendant’s shoe department, testified that while about to Avait on plaintiff’s mother she saw plaintiff take a pair of shoes from the bargain rack *412 and put them in her brown shopping bag; that she stood close to plaintiff and saw the shoes near the top of the bag; that as she identified plaintiff to Burns, manager of the shoe department, plaintiff ran across the store into a fitting room. Mrs. McCall admitted that she asked Bechtel at the hearing the next day whether he knew a pair of shoes had been found under a counter. According to her, Bechtel replied that he knew a pair of shoes had been found, but that Bechtel did not tell her to conceal that fact from the chief of police.

J. J. Burns, manager of the shoe department, testified that he saw plaintiff enter the fitting room immediately after Mrs. McCall had pointed her out to him. He said he saw plaintiff enter the fitting room with a shopping bag and emerge without it, and that he then telephoned upstairs for Bechtel or Holliday. Holliday came down with Bechtel and they examined the contents of the shopping bag found in the fitting room. It contained unwrapped merchandise with defendant’s store marks thereon; there were no sales slips with the respective items. No shoes were found in the bag.

Bechtel testified that he then stood in the shoe department and saw plaintiff, who had been pointed out to him by Mrs. McCall, return. As he watched her, he saw plaintiff take a pair of white oxfords (low-heeled, nurses’ style) from the counter and drop them in the shopping bag which she was carrying at the time. Plaintiff walked across the store to the steps leading to the mezzanine floor and was joined by her mother. According to Bechtel he followed plaintiff and observed that both went up to the mezzanine floor; that they came down immediately and walked out of the store. Following them out of the store, Bechtel identified himself to plaintiff and told her that he was from the store of Montgomery Ward & Company. He asked her for the receipt for the pair of shoes she had placed in her bag in the store. He testified that plaintiff told him he *413

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.2d 442, 165 Pa. Super. 408, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-montgomery-ward-co-pasuperct-1949.