Wehmeyer v. Mulvihill

130 S.W. 681, 150 Mo. App. 197, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 687
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 681 (Wehmeyer v. Mulvihill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wehmeyer v. Mulvihill, 130 S.W. 681, 150 Mo. App. 197, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 687 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

NORTON!, J.

This is a suit for damages accrued on account of a false imprisonment. The plaintiff recovered both actual and punitive damages and defendants appeal.

It appears that plaintiff, who was the proprietor of a nickelodeon, known as the Star Theater, 1511 Market Street, made a purchase of some linoleum from the defendant furniture company of which Michael J. Mulvihill is the president. On this purchase, a payment of five dollars was made and defendant gave a receipt for that amount. On the following day, plaintiff canceled the order for linoleum and the defendant agreed that he might have credit at the furniture store to the amount of five dollars to be thereafter paid in goods which plaintiff might see fit to purchase. The purport of the instruction was for plaintiff to retain the receipt showing five dollars was paid on the linoleum ordered and that goods would be exchanged therefor. The matter ran along thus for about two months and plaintiff called at defendants’ store and purchased a rug from one of defendants’ salesmen for the price of $6.50. He paid $1.50 on the rng and instructed that it be delivered at his theatre O. O. D. for the balance of the purchase price. The rug was delivered on the following day by defendants’ employee, engaged in delivering goods, and plaintiff proffered the receipt for five dollars, representing the amount due him from defendants on the linoleum purchase in payment on the amount due on the rug. Defendants’ driver had no information touching [202]*202the arrangement'between plaintiff and defendants in respect of this matter and declined to accept the receipt as payment on the rug. Plaintiff insisted defendants owed him the balance of five dollars on the linoleum transaction and told the deliveryman that defendants would accept the receipt in payment, as per their' prior agreement to pay him the amount in goods. Notwithstanding this, the deliveryman declined to accept the receipt, returned to defendants’ store and related the facts to the defendant, Michael J. Mulvihill, president of the defendant corporation. Mr. Miulvihill thereupon instructed the. deliveryman, Scott, to go to the police station, about three or four blocks distant from the store, and state the facts to the officer in charge. Upon ' relating the facts to the officer in charge at the police station, an officer was detailed to accompany Scott, the deliveryman, to plaintiff’s place of business. The officer and Scott repaired immediately thereto, accosted plaintiff and inquired touching the matter in dispute; that is to say, the officer inquired what was the trouble between him and defendants about the purchase of the rug. Plaintiff thereupon explained the circumstances to the police officer and showed him the receipt which he held from the defendant furniture company for five dollars theretofore paid on the linoleum. He stated that it had theretofore been agreed by Mr. Mulvihill that- he might at any time have five ^dollars in goods in liquidation of the amount of cash theretofore paid by him on the linoleum which he had never received. After hearing plaintiff’s statement, the officer suggested that he had better accompany him to Mr. Mulvihill’s store and talk it over. Thereupon the police officer, the plaintiff and Scott, the defendants’ deliveryman, repaired to defendants’ furniture store and discussed the matter with -Mr. Mulvihill. The plaintiff insisted that he had a right to keep the rug and apply the amount due him from the defendant on the purchase price thereof. And it appears that Mr. Mulvihill insisted such was not proper [203]*203in view of the fact plaintiff had purchased the rug by paying $1.50 down with an understanding the remaining five dollars of the purchase price was to be paid upon delivery. Of this Mr. Mulvihill says: “I asked him why he wanted to act in that way. He said he thought he was entitled to that rug. I told him I didn’t think he was entitled to it in that way; that it was a commercial transaction. He purchased it from the salesman and paid $1.50 and it was sent C. O. D. He took the rug from the driver and we held the driver responsible for it and we could not let him get away that way.”

It appears the plaintiff is a German and speaks the English language with difficulty. However, enough was said by him in .that conversation to recall clearly to Mr. Mulvihill the transaction pertaining to the linoleum by reason of which the Mulvihill Furniture Company acknowledged its indebtednéss to him in the sum of five dollars to be thereafter paid in merchandise. Indeed, Mr. Mulvihill did not deny the plaintiff’s right to receive the five dollars in merchandise but seems rather to have laid particular stress upon the fact that plaintiff had’caused the rug to be delivered to him C. O. D. and attempted to pay the deliveryman with the receipt instead of paying cash. During this conversation in defendants’ store, Mr. Mulvihill requested the plaintiff to return the rug and he Avould cause to be repaid to him $1.50 Avhich he had paid on the purchase price thereof. Plaintiff declined to accede to this request and insisted upon his right to receive credit on the purchase' of the rug for the five dollars which defendants had received from him on the linoleum and promised to repay him in other goods. Upon plaintiff’s declining to accede to the demand to return the rug, defendant Mulvihill directed the police officer to arrest plaintiff and convey him to the captain who was in charge of the police station. Touching this matter, defendant Mulvihill testified as follows:

“Q. What did you say in relation to it? A. I [204]*204said, ‘Why didn’t you pay the driver for that rug or return the rug and I would give you back the $1.50?’ I said, £We don’t want any trouble with you.’ He said, ‘I want the $5 for the linoleum.’ I said, ‘It was ordered and we expected him to pay.’ I said, ‘Officer, there is nothing else to do but to let the captain settle the matter.’ That was all that took place.”

Thereupon .the police officer took the plaintiff into custody, conveyed him to the police station and locked him in a cell with other prisoners where he was confined for about two hours. It appears plaintiff cried and was greatly humiliated. In the meantime, an employee of plaintiff, Mr. Sweeney, appeared at defendants’ store and appealed to Mr. Mulvihill to release the defendant. Upon Mr. Sweeney’s paying the five dollars balance, which he- insisted was due on the purchase of the rug, Mr. Mulvihill accompanied him to the police station and directed the captain to release and discharge the plaintiff from further custody. Mr. Mulvihill said he directed' the plaintiff’s release at the earnest request of Mrs. Wehmeyer, conveyed to him through Sweeney. He testified, “Mr. Sweeney handed me the five dollars.” .... “He said, ‘For God’s sake let that Dutchman out. His Avife is going crazy.’ I told it to Captain Reynolds.” After having thus received the five dollars from Sweeney, Mulvihill accompanied him to the police station and personally directed the captain to release plaintiff from further imprisonment.

The jury awarded plaintiff a verdict of one thousand dollars actual damages and assessed punitive damages in the amount of two thousand five hundred dollars. AfterAvards the court entered an order to the effect that the motion for a new trial would be sustained unless plaintiff entered a remittitur to the amount of five hundred dollars of the actual and one thousand dollars of the punitive damages recovered. The plaintiff entered the remittitur suggested, and judgment was given on the .verdict thus modified for five hundred dol[205]

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 681, 150 Mo. App. 197, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wehmeyer-v-mulvihill-moctapp-1910.