Stueber v. Admiral Corp.

185 F.2d 10
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 1950
Docket10057
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 10 (Stueber v. Admiral Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stueber v. Admiral Corp., 185 F.2d 10 (7th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

LINDLEY, ¡Circuit Judge.

Defendant appeals from the judgments entered against it in the District Court on the second trial of this ¡consolidated action for malicious prosecution, assigning as error (1) denial of its motions for directed verdicts, made at the close of plaintiffs’ case and again at the ¡close of all the evidence, (2) admission of certain evidence offered by plaintiffs and exclusion of other evidence offered by defendant, (3) giving certain instructions requested by plaintiffs and refusal to give other instructions requested by defendant, and (4) refusal to set aside as excessive the verdicts returned by t'he jury.

On May 1, 1946, defendant’s ¡Chicago warehouse was burglarized and some $19,-000 worth of merchandise stolen, consisting, in part, of 3,125 radio loud speakers, each stamped with defendant’s exclusive ¡part number “78 B 7”, and 2,066 needle cards, on each of which were mounted 12 Admiral “Lifetime” phonograph needles. In the summer of 1946, Louis Marek, a police officer in charge of the investigation of the burglary, was informed by the operator of a radio store that he had purchased Admiral needle cards at an unusually low price from a concern identified as Chicago Radio Parts ¡Company. The police, having determined that plaintiffs, Robert and James Stueber, were the owners and operators of ¡Chicago Radio Parts ¡Company, a co-partnership, and having kept them “under *12 surveillance” ¡for a period of six weeks, ultimately placed them under arrest, on September 21, 1946.

■Defendant first learned of the arrest on the morning of September 23, 1946, when Heinrich, defendant’s office manager, received a telephone call from Detective Marek, who stated that he had -some stolen merchandise which he wanted Heinrich to identify. Heinrich went to the detective bureau, where he was shown needle cards and speakers which, he was told by Marek, the police had recovered from some people “who were in possession o,f the stolen property.” He was shown 109 needle cards, each containing 12 Admiral Lifetime needles, and nine Admiral speakers of the type stolen from defendant’s warehouse. Heinrich was advised that the merchandise shown to him had been 'found in the basement of plaintiffs’ store, the Chicago Radio Parts Company, and that plaintiffs, with two brothers named Svoboda, who operated a radio store in Cicero, Illinois, were being held 'by the police. Marek showed Heinrich three cancelled checks, totalling $1000, and said that plaintiffs had admitted that they used the proceeds of the checks to buy the Admiral speakers and needles from the Svobodas; Marek also told him, according to Heinrich, Who was called as a witness for plaintiffs, that the police had signed statements from plaintiffs in which they admitted that they “knew it ,was hot stuff.” Heinrich was also shown invoices indicating that plaintiffs had been selling Admiral speakers and needles within a few weeks after the burglary, at prices lower than the established price to dealers. He was then handed two complaints charging plaintiffs with the crime of receiving stolen property, which he refused to sign until he had conferred with his superior, Park, at defendant’s office.

Prior to plaintiffs being taken into custody by the police, defendant’s office manager, Heinrich, had never seen or heard of either of them, although defendant’s wholesale distribution records listed plaintiff, Robert F. Stueber, as one of defendant’s dealers, doing business as Bob’s Radio Repair Shop at a North Avenue address, which was the same as that appearing on the invoices of Chicago' Radio Parts Company. Heinrich admittedly made no personal investigation of plaintiffs or of the manner in which they had acquired the Admiral merchandise, but, after 'his conference with Park, returned to the bureau and signed the complaints against plaintiffs. He testified that, in reading over the complaints, he noticed discrepancies between the numbers of speakers and needles he had been shown by the police and the quantities inserted in the complaints, ¡but was informed by Marek that the numbers appearing in the complaints had been computed from invoices furnished by plaintiffs. Marek, on the -other hand, testified that, at the time Heinrich signed the complaints, the numbers had not yet been inserted. These complaints were filed the next day, September 24, 1946, and, after two continuances granted to plaintiffs, a hearing was held on November 22, 1946, at the conclusion of which plaintiffs were discharged by the examining judge of the Municipal Court. Subsequently, each plaintiff filed suit against defendant. The actions were consolidated for trial and plaintiffs recovered judgments which were reversed by this court on appeal, because of the admission of improper evidence by the trial court. Stueber v. Admiral Corp., 171 F.2d 777. The second trial also resulted in judgments for plaintiffs', from which defendant prosecutes this appeal.

It is well 'settled in Illinois, as elsewhere, that the plaintiff in an action for malicious prosecution has the burden of ■proving both want of probable cause and malice. Jacks v. Stimpson, 13 Ill. 701, 702, 703; Harpham et al. v. Whitney, 77 Ill. 32, 38; Knickerbocker Ice Co. v. Scott, 76 Ill.App. 645, 647. In the last of the cited cases, probable cause is defined as “reasonable ground for suspicion, supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves to warrant a cautious man in the belief that the accused is guilty of the offense charged.” It is defendant’s contention that in the instant case, the uncontradicted evidence clearly establishes existence of probable cause for prosecution of the plaintiffs, and it is urged that the trial court erred in refusing to direct the *13 jury so to find. Plaintiffs, however, maintain that this court’s holding, on the prior appeal, that it was for the jury to determine “whether all the 'facts and circumstances in evidence prove presence or lack of probable cause” became the law of the case on the second, trial, thus precluding the trial court from directing a verdict on that issue and requiring that it be submitted to the jury.

It is, of course, true that the decision of an appellate court becomes the law of the case with respect to the particular questions presented to and decided toy it and must be followed in all -subsequent proceedings in that case, Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Wharton, 8 Cir., 63 F.2d 378, 379; Standard Accident Ins. Co. v. Rossi, 8 Cir., 52 F.2d 547, 549; Lackner v. McKechney, 7 Cir., 2 F.2d 516, but, in a cause such as this, where the issue is whether the evidence presents a question for the jury or one for the court, the rule obtains only if the evidence adduced on the hearing on remand is substantially identical with that presented at the original trial. This is apparent from this court’s opinion in Lackner v. McKechney, 2 F.2d 516

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185 F.2d 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stueber-v-admiral-corp-ca7-1950.