Steinman v. Baltimore Antiseptic Steam Laundry Co.

71 A. 517, 109 Md. 62, 1908 Md. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 71 A. 517 (Steinman v. Baltimore Antiseptic Steam Laundry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinman v. Baltimore Antiseptic Steam Laundry Co., 71 A. 517, 109 Md. 62, 1908 Md. LEXIS 133 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of tresspass vi et armis by the appellant against the appellee for an alleged assault and battery committed by an agent and servant of the defendant corporation in the regular course of his employment by the defendant. The defendant is a laundry company, duly incorporated.

The plaintiff, who is a married woman, to prove her case, produced only two witnesses. Her first witness was G. E. Saffran, who testified that he was route superintendent of defendant at the time of the alleged assault, and that he was required in the discharge of his duty to adjust disputes about the work done by the laundry company; the non-delivery, or misdelivery, of laundered goods, and complaints made to the laundry company, or claims presented against the company. On cross-examination he said he was authorized to ■compromise or settle claims under fifty cents, but for any -claim over that amount he was obliged to obtain the authority of the manager of the company. He also said he was authorized to collect money due the company; that when the wagon drivers deliver work without getting the money, they do so at their own risk, and that in such case he is authorized to compromise the claim under fifty cents, but that he has no authority to arrest persons against whom the company has claims for work done. He also stated that when a driver is sick or discharged, he takes his wagon at the laundry, and that when he went to Mrs. Steinman’s house on the day of the ■alleged assault, he went of his own accord, to collect his own *64 money. The plaintiff, Mrs. Steinman, was the only other witness. She testified, that Saffran came to her house on the day of the alleged assault and said, “Let me see the blankets that were left here;” that she brought the blankets and said, “Are they the wrong blankets ?” and he said, “No, they are the right blankets, and I am going to take them with me.” That she said, “No, you are not,” and he put his hands on the blankets,” and she said, “No, you are not,” and put her hands on them. That he then said, “There is a police across the street, and if you don’t take your hands off the blankets, I will call him and have the policeman arrest you.” She says she thought he had a policeman with him and she turned and looked, and when she turned he took the blankets and went out, and then came back and said, “Don’t tell your husband I frightened you to death,” “and then I knew nothing, else.” She was then asked if he touched her at all, and she replied, “With his knee against my knee;” that she was sitting on a chair and the blankets were on a seat beside her;, that she was then about four months advanced in pregnancy ;. that when his knee touched hers it caused no pain. She then offered to prove by herself that after the facts above stated she fainted, and when she revived found she had suffered a uterine hemorrhage, and further offered to prove by a practicing physician of twenty years’ standing that he was her physician and knew she was then about four months advanced in pregnancy, and that the uterine hemorrhage testified to by her was á natural result of the nervous shock and fright caused by the conduct of Saffran as described by her.

She also offered to prove that her husband, about three weeks after this occurrence, received a letter from Messrs, Yellott & Symington, attorneys for the laundry company, asking him to call at the laundry for “his two blankets,”' which he could have on payment of one dollar, the charge for washing them, or they would be sent him on payment of that amount. All this offer of testimony was objected to, and to its exclusion the first exception was taken.

*65 The defendant then offered two prayers withdrawing the case from the jury, both of which were granted. The first of these prayers asserted there was no legally sufficient evidence to entitle the plaintiff to recover, and the second, that there was no legally sufficient evidence that the alleged assault was committed by the witness, Saffran, within the scope of his employment by the defendant.

The declaration is unusually brief, merely alleging that “the defendant, by its agent and servant, in the regular course of employment, assaulted and beat the plaintiff in the City of Baltimore on May 25th, 1906. And the plaintiff claims $5,000 damages.” But the averments are ample to warrant recovery, if sustained by legally sufficient evidence. It was necessary to prove, first, that an assault was committed by defendant’s servant, and, second, that it was committed in the course of his employment. It would not be sufficient to show that a wrong was committed in taking the bJ ankets from the premises and possession of the plaintiff.

The exclusion of the testimony offered and the ruling upon the prayers involve but one question and may be considered together. If the proffered testimony was legally sufficient as tending to show an actual assault by Saffran, and that it was committed in the course of his employment, or that it was approved and ratified by the defendant, it should have been admitted. If it did not, it was properly excluded, and the same principles are applicable to the prayers offered.

The only evidence that Saffran touched the plaintiff’s person at all was her evidence, that when he took the blankets from the chair upon which they were lying, and which was beside the chair in which she was seated, that his knee came in contact with her knee, causing her, as she says, no pain. There is no evidence whatever of any threat of violence or any attempt to use force, or of any gesture indicating such purpose. It would not be possible, if his knee had not touched hers, that an action for assault alone could be maintained, and to warrant a recovery the evidence must establish a battery. The weight of authority is decided, that the mere *66 touching of one’s' person by' another,, unless wilfully or in anger, or in- -a contemptuous or insolent manner, does not constitute a battery, but it is unnecessary to review these 'authorities. There is no pretense here that this contact of his knee with hers was wilful, angry or insolent, and the ■ only inference from her testimony is that it was purely accidental, as in the case of one stumbling, and in his fall coming in contact with the- person of another. - ' ■ '

- But the '-plaintiff, nevertheless, contends that as she claims tp-have had her hands resting on the blankets when Saffran took them from the chair, that he was guilty of technical assault, and to sustain this contention she relies upon the case of Dyk v. DeYoung, 35 Ill. App. 138. In -that case the defendant attempted to snatch from the hands of a married woman, then pregnant,- a receipt which she held. In the Struggle the paper was torn, and she testified that the defendant, as he grasped for the receipt, struck her in the abdomen. The Court held that this was a technical assault. It is true. that “anything attached to the person partakes of its inviolability,” as stated in Selwyn's Nisi Prius, 27, and there is no occasion to criticise the Illinois case above, its facts bringing it within that rule. But the present case is quite different.' Here it is clear that instead of using violence, the defendant resorted to a ruse to obtain the blankets.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 A. 517, 109 Md. 62, 1908 Md. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinman-v-baltimore-antiseptic-steam-laundry-co-md-1908.