Winans v. Congress Hotel Co.

227 Ill. App. 276, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 47
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 11, 1922
DocketGen. No. 27,768
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 227 Ill. App. 276 (Winans v. Congress Hotel Co.) 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
Winans v. Congress Hotel Co., 227 Ill. App. 276, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 47 (Ill. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case the plaintiff, who is appellee here, sued the defendant in an action on the ease. She filed a declaration of five counts; in two of these she alleged damages by reason of a false arrest and imprisonment, and in three counts damages by reason of the malicious prosecution of a criminal action. The. defendant filed a plea of the general issue, and certain special pleas which were afterwards withdrawn under a stipulation which provided that the defendant might under the general issue offer any defense that might have been pleaded under any special plea filed. The cause was tried by a jury, which brought in a verdict finding the defendant guilty, and assessing the plaintiff’s damages at $3,000, and on this verdict the court, overruling a motion for a new trial by defendant, entered judgment.

The defendant is a well-known hotel in the City of Chicago. It had a house detective, one John V. Lacey, who by the direction of its officers, on July 12, 1919, obtained leave to file an information in the municipal court of Chicago, which charged that the plaintiff, on June 8, 1919, had put up at the hotel and procured room and board and other accommodations, amounting to $815.25, had left the hotel, without paying therefor, with intent to cheat and defraud the hotel. The prosecution was brought under section 155a, eh. 38, Hurd’s Rev. St. pp. 1025,1919 [Cahill’s Ill. St. ch. 38, ¶ 358].

A judge of the municipal court certified that there was probable cause for filing the same, and the record shows that the court found defendant was arrested without warrant, and ordered her into custody forthwith. She waived a trial by jury, and the cause was submitted to the court. By agreement of the parties the trial was set for July 25, 1919, and the court, “after being fully advised in the premises, finds defendants not guilty of offense charged, and defendant is discharged.” This suit for damages followed. The defendant, at the close of all the evidence, made a motion for an instruction in its behalf, which was denied by the court, and the argument here seems to be that the court erred in so ruling. As to the counts which charged malicious prosecution, it is said there was an utter failure on plaintiff’s part to sustain the burden cast on her to show, by the proofs, both malice and want of probable cause. It is further urged, as to these counts, that the uncontradicted evidence showed complete defenses, first, in that, prior to beginning the criminal prosecution, defendant made a full, fair and truthful statement of the facts within its knowledge to reputable counsel, who advised that there was probable cause for the criminal prosecution; secondly, that the complaint made was examined by the judge, and by him indorsed with the statement that he was satisfied that there was probable cause for filing the complaint, and it is said that this indorsement of the judge has the same effect as the advice of counsel, and is a complete defense. That such is the rule of law, where a full and complete disclosure of the facts is made in good faith, either to a reputable attorney or to an examining magistrate, is settled by many decisions, the leading ease being Glenn v. Lawrence, 280 Ill. 581. An examination of the evidence, however, indicates that there was some evidence from which the jury might reasonably conclude that such full and fair disclosure had not been made, and this being the state of the record, it was not error to deny defendant’s motion.

In support of this assignment of error, the defendant argues, as it necessarily must, that there is no" evidence tending to sustain the allegations of the counts of the declaration which charged a false arrest by one of the agents of defendant.

The facts in this record are that the plaintiff was at the time in question the wife of one Wesley W. Winans. They had been living at Winnipeg, Canada, where the father and mother of plaintiff also resided, and the family were, apparently, held in high esteem. The husband came alone to defendant’s hotel on June 8, 1919; the plaintiff coming direct from Winnipeg and, at the request of her husband, arrived at the defendant’s hotel on June 24, was registered by her husband and assigned with him to the room, previously occupied by the husband, and which they thereafter occupied together. Two days after her arrival, on June 26, she was taken very ill, and her husband summoned the house physician, Dr. J. M. Blake. She testifies that she was very ill for three days and was confined to her room for five days. On July 7, she learned for the first time that the hotel was pressing for payment of their bill. The matter was taken up by Mr. Edwards, the secretary and treasurer of the defendant company, and Mr. Tyson, also an officer of the defendant. With their knowledge and approval, Mrs. Winans made efforts to get the necessary funds from her lawyer at Winnipeg, from her parents there and from her brother in a distant city. She used the telephone and telegraph, but her efforts, for reasons not now necessary to consider, were unavailing, and finally plaintiff’s father, in response to a query by wire from the defendant hotel as to whether he would render financial assistance, replied by wire, “No.” Thereupon defendant consulted an attorney, and decided to take action in the prosecution of plaintiff under the provisions of the Criminal Act referred to. On the 11th of July, about three o’clock in the afternoon, Mr. Edwards came to plaintiff’s room. She was alone. He told her that he had received a wire from her father saying “No,” and she says “told me that I would have to take a trip to the police station.” She told him that she insisted on seeing Mr. Turner of the Bank of Montreal, who, the evidence shows, knew her family and knew her in her childhood. Mr. Edwards left the room, whereupon she tried to reach Mr. Turner by telephone, but was informed that he had left the office for the day. She succeeded, however, in reaching another friend of her family, Mr. G-alt, who at once came to the hotel. She says Mr. Lacey came up to her room. “He told me I was going to jail. He said £I told them all the time you are no good and thieves and I know it.’ He stayed until I had time to pack. Mr. Winans telephoned while Mr. Lacey was in the room, and I told him to come to the hotel. He came in about ten or fifteen minutes. Mr. Lacey told Mr. Winans to pack up as quickly as he could; that ho had a warrant for our arrest. * * * Our trunks were taken out of our rooms by a man with one of those trunk things. We were taken out of our room by Mr. Lacey. No one was with him. We went down in the elevator, out in Michigan avenue, and walked south to the end of the Congress Hotel to Harrison street. Mr. Winans, Mr. Lacey and myself were in the party. I had not to my knowledge seen Mr. Lacey before that afternoon. When we got to Harrison and Michigan avenue, two detectives were waiting. Mr. Lacey left us with these men. They asked me if I would rather take a taxi, and I thought I would rather walk. We walked to the police station, about five blocks.”

An additional abstract of the record shows that Lacey came to plaintiff’s room, left his hat on; that when she got out a little suit case to pack up her things, he said, “Oh, none of that, you will pack a paper parcel and a brush and comb and tooth brush, you don’t pack anything like that when you go to jail.” Further that Mrs. Winans had explained to Dr. Blake that she had been in a hospital in Winnipeg about six or seven weeks before having undergone an operation there.

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227 Ill. App. 276, 1922 Ill. App. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winans-v-congress-hotel-co-illappct-1922.