Tumalty v. Parker

100 Ill. App. 382, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 726
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 21, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 100 Ill. App. 382 (Tumalty v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tumalty v. Parker, 100 Ill. App. 382, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 726 (Ill. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Waterman

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action for malicious prosecution.

Upon the trial in the court below, it appeared that the plaintiff therein, in November, 1893, had in his possession a horse, buggy and harness, and claimed to be owner thereof. The wife of plaintiff below was then, according to his statement, owing defendant below seventy-five dollars. According to the testimony of Tumalty, Mr. Parker was owing him $411.50 for plumbing done by him upon houses owned by Mrs. Parker. Plaintiff and defendant had been acquainted for some years.

Under this previous relationship, plaintiff, in the said November, drove this horse to defendant’s shop, 2251 Cottage Grove avenue, and, according to the testimony of Parker, told him “ how the mare had been abused; ” “ that he had no money,” and asked Tumalty if he had a place where he, Parker, could put “ the horse, buggy and harness,” to which Tumalty replied “ yes.”

Parker says that he also told Tumalty the “ trouble ” he had. The trouble seems to have been because of various business transactions and the persecution, as he terms it, and doubtless so told Tumalty, of various parties; about 175 suits had been begun against him; he had been arrested fifteen times; was under bonds for $12,000; the sheriff and officers were looking for him; his bond had been forfeited; he was hiding; and he'owed $60 to “ Moore’s Stables” for the board of the mare, and was out of funds.

Parker testifies, “ I told Mr. Tumalty, if he was ready, he could go with me there to his barn,” and he said, “ Drive her round to Twenty-fourth and Prairie avenue; I don’t want any one to see me with you; ” that Tumalty gave him a key to the barn and told him that he would have to pay four dollars a week for the keep of the mare; that she remained there eight or nine weeks; that he drove the mare out every night for exercise; that in February, Tumalty, told him “ for God’s sake to take the mare out of the barn; ” “ that he was afraid he would get into trouble.” That the detectives had been to his store to examine his horses and he did not want to get into trouble; “ For God’s sake, take her out.”

Parker says he went to the barn that night; that a new lock had been put on and his key wouldn’t fit, so he got a boy about twelve years old, pushed some boards back and . the boy in; and the boy lifted the scantling that held the door; then he, Parker, took the horse, buggy and harness and drove over to the “ Kentucky Stables,” corner Paulina and Man Burén streets, where he left the property; that this was in December or February. He neither saw nor communicated with Tumalty until he was arrested, March 5th, Parker says a month to six weeks after he took the horse from Tumalty’s barn. If the horse were placed in Tumalty’s barn at a charge of $4 per week, Parker was, when he took it out, apparently owing Tumalty some $40 for its board.

Parker testified that afterward he told his (Tumalty’s) man, that “ I had her (the horse) safe planted; that was the word I used. I wasn’t going to tell anybody where she was.”

Tumalty testified:

“ I did some work once for Mr. Parker or his family. At the time this horse was turned over to me Mr. Parker came over to my shop and called me outside, and after he got me outside he says, ‘ Tumalty, I want you to take a walk over here with me;’ he says, ‘ I want to turn over a horse, my horse, buggy and harness, to you as a part of that debt that T owe you out at Park Manor.’ I didn’t know where the horse was then, and we walked along Twenty-third street until we came to a blacksmith shop at 112 Twenty-third street, and he says to me, ‘I haven’t got any money, and I can’t afford to keep this horse, and I may as well straighten up some of that debt.’ And he said, ‘ How-much are you going to give' for him? ’ and wanted $300, but I told him no; that I could not afford to give him that much; I would give him $200; because the horse was all foundered and the buggy wasn’t much account; so he says, ‘ All right.’ And he drove from there over to my barn, in the alley between Michigan and Wabash (2311), in the rear, and I put the horse away, and Mr. Parker walked off down Wabash avenue and I went on back to the shop. I was talking to Mr. Parker about an indebtedness on some house I did for him in Park Manor. I did all the transactions with Mr. Parker, not with his wife. He wanted I should take that horse as part of the indebtedness.

■ The amount of the indebtedness at that time to me on the Parker account was $611.50. The $200 was credited to Mr. Parker on this account. I didn’t see Mr. Parker for about a week; one evening, about six o’clock in the evening, 1 met Mr. Parker on the corner of Twenty-third and Cottage Grove avenue, and he said he was just going over to my place, and he says, ‘ I want to borrow the mare to take my wife riding; she has been sick;” and I said, ‘All right;’ so I walked over to the barn with him and told the man to hitch the mare up for him. Mr. Parker drove her out. I guess it was a week or two after that he again asked me to drive her out, and he drove her, I think, three times, but he always brought her back; he always asked me for permission. Every time that I knew he drove her he asked me for permission with the exception of once. I did not give Mr. Parker the keys or a key to be given to him, to my barn, at any time. There were no arrangements between Mr. Parker and me in regard to the renting of my barn. I did not agree with him that he was to pay one-third of my barn rent. No arrangement was made in regard to who should take care of the horse while it was in my barn; there was no arrangement made. My man that I hired took care of the horse. I drove that horse almost any time, may be two or three times a week in the day time; 1 usually drove down Michigan avenue and out on the drive. The first time I found out that the horse had been taken out without my permission was along about February 18th or 19th; there was dry sweat on the horse. I accused the man in the barn, my driver, of driving the horse.

I told the man not to allow the horse to be taken out; to take a new look and to lock the barn. I had my locks changed on my barn. The lock was changed about six to eight days before the horse was taken. The man told me the horse and buggy and harness was gone. I went over to the barn and the boards were torn off the barn door. The boards were lying in the alley; were broken off the door; it was the board that laps the two big doors. I did not then know who had taken them, and I had no idea who had taken them. I went down to the police station at Twenty-sixth street, and I reported there that somebody had stolen my horse, buggy and harness. I did not have any idea who took them then. The second day after that the man came over that slept in the barn; came over and told me that his brothe'r told him that Parker had been there and broke into the barn and taken the horse, buggy and harness, and had driven away down- the alley. Then I went to hunt up where I could find Parker; I went to the police and told them, but they didn’t know where Parker was; I told the police that Parker had taken the horse because this young man told me so. Then for five or six weeks after that I was looking for Parker, but never could find him. I didn’t know where Parker lived. I did work for him, but that was in ’88 or ’89. It was pretty hard to find out where he lived. He was not livingin the same house in which he used to live.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Ill. App. 382, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tumalty-v-parker-illappct-1902.