Stubbs v. Mulholland

67 S.W. 650, 168 Mo. 47, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 28, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 650 (Stubbs v. Mulholland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stubbs v. Mulholland, 67 S.W. 650, 168 Mo. 47, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 165 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

SHERWOOD, P. J.

— Action for malicious prosecution. The defendant banking company, of which defendant John Mulholland is president, and the other defendants were employees, is a business concern, whose chief, if not exclusive business consists in buying laboring men’s time; that is, .by discounting' their pay checks, etc. The calling seems to have been remunerative, as they employed at a salary A. L. Sherman as a lawyer to attend to their legal business and gave him deskroom in their banking office.

J. H. Stubbs, the plaintiff in this action, testifying in his own behalf, in substance stated that he was thirty years of age; that he had never been in Kansas City until brought there on a warrant of arrest in April, 1897, from his residence in Scott county (Blodgett). He had formerly lived in that county; lived there somewhat over twenty years, having arrived there from Eddyville, Kentucky, when a boy nine years old. On his arrival in Scott county, he worked on a farm until October, 1888, when he was employed in the store of Marshall, McMillan & Company of Scott county in their dry goods department; that his physician, thinking he had Bright’s disease, advised his removal from Scott county to Springdale, Arkansas, and rec-mended the water for his complaint; that accordingly he removed there with his family, consisting of a wife and two children, and went into the grocery business with W. G-. Thompson, A. L. Thompson and Chas. Stubbs, his brother, and [55]*55remained in Springdale, living -with his family, a wife and two children, from January, 1896, to December 1 of that year; that regaining his health, and business being very dull, and being solicited by his old employers, Marshall Bros., to return to Missouri, they offering him an interest in their business, should he do so, he accepted their offer, and went back with his family to Scott county, Missouri. It was generally known in Springdale that plaintiff contemplated leaving there with his family to return to Scott county, Missouri; that prior to his being brought before Justice Case on a charge of forgery, he never saw the $75 check on which he was charged with forging the name of "W. G. Thompson (the payee in the check), by indorsing his name thereon; that he never indorsed Thompson’s name on that check; that prior to his arrest, detective Kinney never called on him for information and no one else ever made inquiry of,him about the matter contained in the charge; that he was under arrest from Friday of one week to Thursday of the next; that when brought to Kansas City he was locked up in jail, being in jail about thirty minutes; that witness requested officer Hughes, one of the defendants, to allow witness to give bail before being taken-to jail; that it was understood that witness was to be permitted to give such bond but that witness was taken to jail notwithstanding said agreement.

He also testified as to expense he had incurred.

The complaint filed on April 21, 1897, by one of defendants, Thos. A. Barber, charged plaintiff with forging the name of ~W. G. Thompson on the following check: “Treasurer of the Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe Ev. Co. Pay to the order of "W. G. Thompson ($75.00) seventy-five dollars in full payment of wages for May, 1896. J. Moore.” Indorsed on the back as follows: “W. G. Thompson.”

The forging was charged to have been done in Jackson county, Missouri, on the — day of June, 1896, in order to defraud the John Mulholland Banking Company, a corporation.

[56]*56The warrant issuing on .the complaint, was served by Patrick J. Hughes, D. O. special officer arresting plaintiff on April 28, 1897, at Blodgett, in Scott county.

On hearing had on April 28, 1897, justice Case adjudged plaintiff not guilty and discharged him. At the trial, Mulholland, Barber and Hughes all testified against plaintiff.

Hughes, who made the arrest, had been in the employ of the John Mulholland Banking Company since May, 1893, and his time went on while absent going to Scott county, making the arrest and returning with the prisoner. Sherman was the general attorney of the banking company, and with his knowledge and under his directions, Hughes got himself appointed special deputy and went and arrested and brought plaintiff from Scott county; Barber, defendant, who made the complaint was working on a salary for the banking company; he was cashier and secretary.

It was testified by A. L. Thompson, father of W. Q-. Thompson (both of whom were plaintiff’s partners) that plaintiff, during the month of June, 1896, was continuously at Springdale, Arkansas, except when he went fishing two or three times, a distance of seven miles, and once up to Rogers, distance ten miles, on business for the company, and with those exceptions he was at 'Springdale all the time from April to November. That on those little excursions plaintiff was not gone long enough to have gone to Kansas City and returned.

The books of account of said grocery firm being produced, witness testified that the entries in that book in the month of June, 1896, were made by witness, Eloyd Thompson, W. G. Thompson, Ohas. Stubbs and Joseph H. Stubbs and another party, who had been delivering goods, by the name of Dodson; that witness knew the handwriting of plaintiff Stubbs and identified certain entries made in said books of account by plaintiff Stubbs in June, 1896. "Witness further testified that W. G. Thompson had a separate postoffice box from the box of the [57]*57grocery firm; that mail of said "W. G. Thompson was not received or deposited in the firm’s box.

Ohas. Stubbs, brother of plaintiff, confirmed what A. L. Thompson had testified regarding plaintiff’s continued presence in Springdale, with the exception of the short excursions aforesaid; that both plaintiff and witness sold goods in the store at Springdale, Arkansas, during the month of June, 1896, and that, in the opinion of witness, plaintiff was in the store at that place every day during the month of June. .

W. G. Thompson, whose name plaintiff had been charged with so forging, testified that he lived at Springdale, Arkansas; that he was the payee in said checkp.that he was then and had been in the employ of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ee Railroad Company, and was at the time of the issuing of that check in June, 1896; that he had been in the employ of that company since 1892; that he knows the handwriting of plaintiff Stubbs, and has known it since January, 1896; that the signature of W. G. Thompson on the back of that check is not the handwriting of plaintiff, and is not the handwriting of the witness; that witness had correspondence with the general officers of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ee Railroad Company respecting the non-appearance and loss of this check; this check was issued in June, 1896, for the services of witness in May, 1896; said check reads as follows:

“Treasurer of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ee Ry. Co., office. Pay to the order of W. G. Thompson, seventy-five ($75.00) dollárs, in full payment for wages for May, 1896.
“J. Moore, Paymaster.”

Witness W. G. Thompson further testified that he bundled up and sent to Mr. Kinney, the detective of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ee Railroad Company, and who was a [58]*58witness at the trial below of defendants’, all the letters and papers relating to said check.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 650, 168 Mo. 47, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubbs-v-mulholland-mo-1902.