Wolf Ex Rel. Wolf v. Nordstrom, Inc.

637 P.2d 1280, 291 Or. 828, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 1124
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1981
DocketCA 17116, SC 27808
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 637 P.2d 1280 (Wolf Ex Rel. Wolf v. Nordstrom, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf Ex Rel. Wolf v. Nordstrom, Inc., 637 P.2d 1280, 291 Or. 828, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 1124 (Or. 1981).

Opinions

[830]*830CAMPBELL, J.

Plaintiff, a young boy, brought this action through his guardian ad litem for false imprisonment and battery in connection with his detention by defendant’s employee as a shoplifting suspect. The trial court granted a directed verdict against defendant on the defense of probable cause to detain and set aside the jury’s award of punitive carnages on the false imprisonment claim.1 Plaintiff appealed the court’s action in setting aside the jury verdict for punitive damages. Defendant cross-appealed alleging error in the jury instruction on punitive damages, in the directed verdict against defendants on the defense of probable cause to detain and in the failure to instruct the jury on the statute governing probable cause, ORS 131.655. The Court of Appeals affirmed. We affirm as to the statutory instruction and the directed verdict. We reverse as to the setting aside of the jury verdict for punitive damages and remand for new trial on that issue only.

On June 21, 1978, a shoplifting incident occurred at defendant’s store in downtown Portland. At approximately 1:10 p.m., defendant’s security officer, Laura Plymale, arrived at the scene of the incident and saw two young boys, one wearing a new pair of white tennis shoes belonging to the store. A later-written description of the shoplifter showed him to be 13 years old, white, with brown hair and brown eyes, 5'3" tall, weighing 120 pounds, and wearing blue jeans, a green jacket, a baseball cap, and the stolen new white tennis shoes. The boys broke away from the clerk detaining them and ran for the nearest exit. Ms. Plymale followed the boys, pausing at the entrance to ask another employee, Mr. Bailey, for help in her pursuit. The chase ended two blocks southwest of the store with her apprehension of both boys.

At 1:15 p.m., plaintiff was entering an indoor shopping mall two blocks northwest of defendant’s store to meet his mother. Plaintiff generally fit the later description of the shoplifter except he wore no hat, was alone rather than [831]*831with another boy, wore old, beat-up white tennis shoes, and was nowhere near defendant’s store or the shoplifter’s flight path therefrom. As he searched for an elevator to his mother’s office on the building’s fourth floor, two men rushed up to him.2 One of the men, Mr. Calhoun, asked plaintiff if he had been in defendant’s store in the past five minutes, to which plaintiff answered no. Mr. Calhoun then grabbed plaintiff by the waistband of his trousers “and said ‘come with me because I have some questions for you.’ “ At no time did either man identify himself to plaintiff or show any identification from defendant’s store. Mr. Calhoun marched plaintiff out of the building without telling him where they were going, despite plaintiffs tearful protests. Plaintiff attempted to escape his captor and was restrained. Before leaving the building, plaintiff told Mr. Calhoun that his mother worked in the building to which Mr. Calhoun responded, “Oh.” Plaintiff was forced to walk the two blocks to defendant’s store. Upon their arrival at the store at about 1:35 p.m., it was determined that plaintiff was not the shoplifter and he was released with apologies. Plaintiff returned to his mother’s office.

The issue in this case is whether the jury’s verdict for punitive damages on the false imprisonment count was properly set aside by the trial court.

The policy underlying awards of punitive damages and the primary justification for use as a guide to determining the propriety of awards for punitive damages was expressed in Noe v. Kaiser Foundation Hospital, 248 Or 420, 435 P2d 306 (1967):

“Punitive damages can only be justified on the theory of determent. See Hodel, The Doctrine of Exemplary Damages in Oregon, 44 Or L Rev 175 (1965). It is only in those instances where the violation of societal interests is sufficiently great and of a kind that sanctions would tend to prevent, that the use of punitive damages is proper. Regardless of the nomenclature by which a violation of these obligations is described (grossly negligent, willful, wanton, malicious, etc.) it is apparent that this court has decided that it is proper to use the sanction of punitive [832]*832damages where there has been a particularly aggravated disregard * * * [of the rights of the victim].” (As interpreted in Crooks v. Payless Drug Stores, 285 Or 481, 592 P2d 196 (1979).

The parties have focused their arguments on two cases decided by this court: Lukas v. J. C. Penney Co., 233 Or 345, 378 P2d 717 (1963), and Fabish v. Montgomery Ward and Co., 276 Or 29, 553 P2d 1057 (1976). We find Fabish to be more in line with the facts before us in this case.

In Lukas, the plaintiff and her granddaughter were in defendant’s store shopping for a dress. A clerk became suspicious that plaintiff concealed a dress belonging to the store in her shopping bag and so alerted defendant’s security officer. Plaintiff left the store but was followed and detained by a security officer about a half block from the store. The officer refused to identify himself on plaintiffs request and engaged in a scuffle with plaintiff for about two minutes in an attempt to search the shopping bag. Plaintiff ultimately allowed the search and, when the officer found nothing, was released. The court found that there was insufficient evidence of “particularly aggravated disregard” to justify submission of the punitive damage issue to the jury. The case before us is not sufficiently similar in its facts to make Lukas controlling. In Lukas, the plaintiff was an adult woman who was detained only two minutes in the proximity of the store after being followed there by a store employee. She was told of the object of the detention, namely, to search her shopping bag. She was not personally restrained at any point, and could have avoided the scuffle by allowing the search to take place. There was no question that she was the person pointed out by the clerk as the shoplifting suspect.

In the case before us, the detention was of a thirteen year old boy for some 20 minutes with defendant’s employee neither identifying himself nor informing plaintiff of his objective in the detention. Plaintiff was not in the flight path of the true shoplifter, nor was he seen by his captor in defendant’s store. Rather, defendant’s employee travelled in the opposite direction from the chase to a building two blocks from defendant’s store and detained [833]*833plaintiff, who did not even match the description later given by the security officer. The employee forced plaintiff to accompany him to defendant’s store, unlike the summary search performed in Lukas, and despite the clear absence of the allegedly stolen tennis shoes from plaintiffs possession. The Lukas case is distinguishable from the case before us and does not control our decision.

In Fabish, plaintiff was detained for over an hour in defendant’s store on suspicion of theft of a book. Plaintiff repeatedly asked to make a phone call to establish his purchase of the book from another store and thereby clear himself of the shoplifting charge. His requests were denied. The court found these facts sufficient to justify an award of punitive damages to deter this type of conduct and upheld the trial court’s refusal to withdraw the issue from the jury.

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Wolf Ex Rel. Wolf v. Nordstrom, Inc.
637 P.2d 1280 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
637 P.2d 1280, 291 Or. 828, 1981 Ore. LEXIS 1124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-ex-rel-wolf-v-nordstrom-inc-or-1981.