Van Dorn v. Kimball

160 N.W. 953, 100 Neb. 590, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 212
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1916
DocketNo. 18837
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 160 N.W. 953 (Van Dorn v. Kimball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Dorn v. Kimball, 160 N.W. 953, 100 Neb. 590, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 212 (Neb. 1916).

Opinion

Sedgwick, J.

Tbe defendant complained to tbe police officers that this plaintiff bad in her possession some property in which tbe defendant was interested, and a policeman was sent with tbe defendant to search for tbe property. They went to tbe bouse where tbe plaintiff was living, and there found some property that did not belong to tbe plaintiff and in which tbe defendant was interested, and tbe police officer required tbe plaintiff to accompany him to the station, which she did, and remained there for some time, and was allowed to go upon her promise to return tbe next morning. She returned the next morning, .and after some examination was allowed to go home, with tbe statement by tbe officer that she need not return until she was called for. She began this action in tbe district court for Lancaster [592]*592county against the defendant to recover damages for an alleged false arrest. On the trial the jury found a verdict in her favor for $10,000 damages. The trial court required her to remit one-half thereof, which she did, and judgment was entered in her favor for $5,000, from which the defendant has appealed.

The plaintiff was conducting a rooming house, called in the record the “Q street house,” and was or had been interested in another rooming house called the “R street house,” which was under the direct management of a Miss Shockey. In this house the bed linen and some of the furniture and other articles were the property of Miss Shockey and were also leased by the defendant. Miss Shockey informed the defendant that some of her property in the R street house, consisting mostly of bed furnishings, had disappeared, and that she believed the plaintiff had taken them and had them in her Q street house where she lived. Upon this information, and perhaps other facts within his knowledge, the defendant complained to the police officers. The officers testified that the defendant suggested that the plaintiff should be arrested, and that they informed the defendant that they would not arrest the plaintiff upon 'the information given them by the defendant without a complaint and warrant. The officers suggested that they would send a policeman with the defendant and, unless the plaintiff objected to their searching her house, they might make such search for the missing articles. Thereupon the next day a policeman, Mr. Sides, was sent to the defendant’s place of business, and he and defendant, taking with them Miss Shockey to identify the articles if found, went to the plaintiff’s residence, and, she making no objection, they made a search of the house and found a considerable quantity of bed linen and other articles which they identified, and were conceded by the plaintiff, to be the property of Miss Shockey, in which the defendant was interested. The value of these articles so identified is variously estimated by [593]*593the defendant’s witnesses at from $50 to $100. According to the plaintiff’s evidence, the value is very-much less. The plaintiff, through some contract between herself and the defendant, was or had been interested in the management of the R street rooming house, and the employees of the laundry where the washing for these two rooming houses was done testified that they supposed that the furnishings for both houses belonged to the plaintiff, and that it was immaterial to which house they were returned, and that articles were frequently received by them from one of the houses and returned to the other house. The plaintiff testified that she did not have the immediate care of the rooms and bedding in her house, that she had a housekeeper and help to attend to these matters, and that she was not aware that the articles had been so exchanged; and the evidence shows that at least some of the articles of the plaintiff, that Avere taken from the house that she occupied, were found immediately after she was arrested in the R street house where Miss Shockey resided.

The evidence wholly fails to prove that the plaintiff had committed any crime requiring her arrest and punishment. In this condition of the evidence, some of the important questions for the jury were whether the defendant, when he complained to the police officers, had sufficient reason to believe and did believe that the property belonging to Miss Shockey, in which he Avas interested, had been purposely taken by the plaintiff into her possession with the intention to feloniously convert it to the plaintiff’s OAvn use, and whether, acting upon that belief, he went to the plaintiff’s residence with the police officer for the purpose of ascertaining the facts.

The defendant first appealed to the chief of police and requested that the plaintiff be arrested for the offense which he appears to have stated that she had committed. The police officer refused to arrest the plaintiff without a complaint and warrant, and the de[594]*594fendant declined to make a complaint. Afterwards the chief of police decided to send an officer with the defendant to make investigations, and the officer, with the help of the defendant and Miss Shockey, made investigation, and thereupon the police officer called up the police headquarters by telephone, and after this conversation over the telephone the officer announced that the plaintiff would be arrested. One of the important questions of . the case was whether the officer determined upon this arrest from what he had himself observed and instructions from headquarters independently of aüy wrongful act on the part of the .defendant, or whether the arrest was brought about by the unjustified statements of the defendant. The evidence is not conclusive upon this point, but is of such a nature as to require it to be submitted to the jury.

There is some language in the petition that might lead one to think that the plaintiff was seeking to recover for slander for false statements made in regard to her character, but that question was entirely eliminated by the court. The case was submitted to the jury entirely upon the theory that the action was for unlawful arrest and imprisonment, and the • jury by instruction were not allowed to consider any damages except those resulting directly from the arrest and imprisonment.

The defendant insists that the court erred in allowing answers to a hypothetical question. Dr. Walker had testified to the physical condition of the plaintiff, showing that the plaintiff had suffered considerably physically, and was then asked this question: “Assuming that prior to June 12 of that same year, five days prior to your examination of her, Mrs. Van Dorn was a strong, well woman, and assuming between the 12th day of June of that year and the 17th day, when you examined her, that she had undergone a severe mental strain by being arrested and confined in the police station of the city, state whether or not, under those conditions of mental worry [595]*595and strain, that might

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 N.W. 953, 100 Neb. 590, 1916 Neb. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-dorn-v-kimball-neb-1916.