Soares v. Ann & Hope of Rhode Island, Inc.

637 A.2d 339, 1994 R.I. LEXIS 38, 1994 WL 36155
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 7, 1994
Docket93-142-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 637 A.2d 339 (Soares v. Ann & Hope of Rhode Island, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soares v. Ann & Hope of Rhode Island, Inc., 637 A.2d 339, 1994 R.I. LEXIS 38, 1994 WL 36155 (R.I. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

MURRAY, Justice.

This matter came before the Supreme Court on the appeal of the defendant, Ann & Hope of Rhode Island, Inc. (Ann & Hope), from a Superior Court judgment on a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff, Patricia Soares (Soares). Soares cross-appeals a myriad of rulings made before and during trial.

This civil action for damages arose out of an alleged shoplifting incident at Ann & Hope’s store in Seekonk, Massachusetts. At trial the parties presented significantly divergent versions of the event and its aftermath. It is therefore necessary to review the record in depth.

Soares testified that on April 26, 1988, she dropped off her husband, Joseph Soares (Joseph), after work and then picked up her son, Joey, at day care. Joey needed a pair of sneakers, so she took him to Ann & Hope.

Once they entered the store, Soares testified, she placed Joey in a carriage and proceeded directly to the shoe department. She tried a few sizes and styles on Joey, and he selected a pair that he liked, which she tried on him. She attempted to find the price, but there was no price on the sneakers, only a tag. Then she checked the box from which she had removed the sneakers, and she found the “gum sticker” inside the box. She explained that the gum sticker is an adhesive tag that contains a price.

Soares removed the sticker from the box and placed it on the tag from which she thought it had come. She figured that in replacing a price tag that had fallen off, she was doing nothing wrong. It had been her experience as a shopper and a former cashier that “prices do fall off things.” She and Joey subsequently left the shoe department, she selected a can of hairspray, and she paid for their purchases.

As Soares and Joey started to exit from the store, an Ann & Hope security guard stopped them. When he asked her to follow him, she asked why. He told her that they would talk about it once they arrived “upstairs.” She inquired why again, and he replied that they could not talk about it then but that he would talk to her upstairs. She further testified that she felt that she had no choice regarding whether or not to go upstairs.

Once upstairs, they entered an office, where Soares and Joey sat down, and Soares again asked what the problem was. The security guard informed her that he had seen her take a price tag from one pair of shoes and attach it to another pair. She denied having done this and explained that she had found the price tag in the box from which she had obtained the shoes. She further explained that she put the price on the tag because she thought it had fallen off from that tag. The guard repeated his version, and Soares reiterated her denial and restated that she had found the price tag in the box. She also offered to pay the correct price if the tag in the box indicated an incorrect price. The security guard stated that he was sorry but that it was too late — the police had been called and the paperwork had been done.

Soares testified that she felt “totally in shock.” She did not feel that she was free to leave the room, and she could not believe that this was happening, especially when her son was present. She felt that the guard was not trying to verify her account or the correct shoe price.

When a police officer arrived, the guard told him something out of Soares’s earshot. The police officer then told Soares that she was being arrested for shoplifting and put handcuffs on her. She asked him why he had to put handcuffs on her in front of her *342 son, and he replied that he had to place them on her anyway and that she should have thought about that before she changed the prices. Soares testified that being handcuffed in front of Joey was heartbreaking and one of the worst experiences of her life. She did not have an opportunity to speak with the manager or anyone but the security guard. She and Joey were led downstairs through the front of the store and outside into the police car. Joey asked the officer whether his “mommy” was going to jail. She tried to reassure him, but she actually felt very nervous and upset.

At the police station, Soares testified, the police fingerprinted and photographed her. She stated that her belongings were searched, and the police placed her in a cell with a mat and a toilet. She was released after about an hour, when bail was posted. She could not eat or sleep that night, and she cried for approximately an hour after going to bed.

The following day Soares was arraigned in District Court in Taunton, Massachusetts. The trial took place approximately four months after her arraignment. She was found not guilty, and the case was dismissed.

She testified that the weeks preceding her trial were “very emotional.” She was very much afraid of being found guilty. She feared losing her job, her family, and her friends. She stated that before the Ann & Hope incident, she' had had a happy marriage, a good job, and good friends; she was also very confident. After the incident, however, she no longer wanted to be around people or to go out or to church or to answer the telephone. She always wanted someone with her when she went shopping. She did not share her feelings with her husband as she used to, and she wanted to be left alone. She sometimes experienced an upset stomach or vomited when she thought about the upcoming trial. She testified that she did not seek medical attention because she felt that perhaps she could handle the situation and she did not want people to think that she was “nuts” or “crazy.”

Soares further testified that in 1978 and 1979 she worked as a cashier in the Ann & Hope store located in Warwick. She was familiar with the store’s security procedures, specifically, the observation towers in the middle of the store, mirrors along the wall, cameras throughout the store, and plainclothes people walking about. She also stated that, as a cashier, she had to match the price tags to the codes written inside the merchandise being purchased. The price, size, and style numbers were supposed to match.

Ann & Hope’s account of the events that took place on April 26, 1988, differed significantly from Soares’s. The security guard, Gregory Daniels (Daniels), testified that when he first noticed Soares, he was in the observation tower in the shoe department, located about three or four feet above the floor. The mirrors on the tower’s exterior enable store detectives to look out and no one to look in.

Daniels observed Soares looking at a pair of shoes, with both hands on a ticket. She turned her back toward him for a second, still holding the ticket. He stated that it looked like her hands were moving, but he could not determine what she was doing. When she turned around, he saw that she had a “sticky price ticket,” which affixes to the bottom of the tag, on her right index finger. Using a pair of binoculars, he then focused on her. She walked toward where he was located, removed a box of Captain Power sneakers from the shelf, and proceeded to a bench that was approximately five to ten feet in front of him. She tried one of the sneakers on her son, took it off, and returned the first box of sneakers to the shelf. She then obtained a second box of sneakers and tried them on her son, all the while keeping the sticky tag on her index finger.

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Bluebook (online)
637 A.2d 339, 1994 R.I. LEXIS 38, 1994 WL 36155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soares-v-ann-hope-of-rhode-island-inc-ri-1994.