Court Opinion

ID: 7275684
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 19:59:08.599157+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:18:50.969429
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice Bingham,
of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, who sat with the Court in the place of Mr. Justice Morris, delivered the opinion of the Court:
On the trial various exceptions were reserved by the defendants to the admission and rejection of testimony by the court, to granting prayers of the plaintiffs, and the rejection of some of those offered by the defendants, and to portions of the charge given by the court to the jury on its own motion. But in the disposition of the case, we only find it necessary to discuss comparatively few of these exceptions, and mainly those which relate to the subject of punitive damages. It will be observed that the allegations of the declaration are ample to charge the defendants Flinder and Hendrick with such malice, brutality, and oppression as, if sustained by proof, would clearly subject them not only to full compensatory damages, but to such punitive damages as the jury might deem proper in the exercise of a sound discretion; and the further averments in the declaration to the effect that in all they did Flinder and Hendrick were acting under the employment, orders and authority of their co-defendants Woodward & Lothrop, would, if sustained by the evidence, authorize the same verdict against them, inclusive of punitive damages.
*229The law in this District upon the subject of punitive damages is very clearly stated by Mr. Justice Gray, in Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company v. Prentice, 147 U. S. 107, as follows: “In this court the doctrine is well settled that in actions of tort the jury, in addition to the sum a-warded by way of compensation for the plaintiff’s injuries, may awrard exemplary, punitive, or vindictive damages, sometimes called smart money, if the defendant has acted wantonly, or oppressively, or with such malice as implies a spirit of mischief or criminal indifference to civil obligations. But such guilty intention on the part of the defendant is required in order to charge him with exemplary damages.” Citing The Amiable Nancy, 3 Wheaton, 546, 558, 559, and seven other cases decided subsequently thereto by the Supreme Court of the United States.
Upon the question of the liability of a principal to punitive damages for the tortious acts and wrongs committed by his agent, Mr. Justice Gray, in the same case, says: “ Exemplary or punitive damages, being awarded not by way of compensation to the sufferer, but by way of punishment of the offender, and as a warning to others, can only be awarded against one who has participated in the offense. A principal, therefore, though of course liable to make compensation for injuries done by his agent within the scope of his employment, cannot be held liable for exemplary or punitive damages merely by reason of wanton, oppressive, or malicious intent on the part of the agent. This is clearly shown by the judgment of this court in the case of The Amiable Nancy, 3 Wheaton, 546.” Again, the learned justice quotes approvingly from the opinion of Mr. Justice Bray ton in Hagan v. Providence and Worcester Railroad, 3 R. I. 88, 91, indorsing an instruction to a jury, as follows: “ Punitive or vindictive damages, or smart money, were not to be allowed as against the principal, unless the principal participated in the wrongful act of the agent, expressly or impliedly, by his conduct authorizing it or approving it, *230either before or after it was committed.” In commenting on this instruction to the jury, Mr. Justice Brayton says: “No man should be punished for that of which he is not guilty. Where the proof does not implicate the principal, and however wicked the servant may have been, the principal neither expressly nor impliedly authorizes or ratifies the act, and the criminalty of it is as much against him as against any other member of society, we. think it is quite enough that he shall be liable in compensatory damages for the injury sustained in consequence of the wrongful act of a person acting as his servant.”
That there is a wide divergence in the decisions of State courts involving the liability of a principal to punitive damages for tortious acts of an agent or servant, is admitted, in Lake Shore, etc., Railway Company v. Prentice, page 116; and in the same case, at page 106, it is said this “is a question not of local law, but of general jurisprudence, upon which this court, in the absence of an express statute-regulating the subject, will exercise its own judgment, uncontrolled by the decisions of the courts of the several States.”
The principles governing the subject of punitive damages having been thus elaborated and settled by the Supreme-Court of the United States, it would be an act not merely of supererogation but rather of unwarrantable assumption ' for this court to attempt a further discussion on this line based upon either principle or authority. It remains for us to apply, as -well as we may, the law thus declared by the-Supreme Court to the circumstances of the present case.
On the trial of the cause, the plaintiff having produced evidence tending to show the employment of Hendrick by Woodward & Lothrop as superintendent, or general superintendent, of the business of the latter, and of the employment of Flinder by Hendrick with the approval of Woodward & Lothrop to act as a detective in the business carried on in the store of the latter, which was extensive, requiring *231a large number of clerks and employees to aid in its prosecution ; and further, the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, especially by the testimony of the female plaintiff and her sister, tending strongly to show that the arrest and search of Mrs. Ragland was accompanied with such rudeness and coarseness of manner and treatment, and with the utterance of such angry, abusive and insulting language on the part of Flinder, as, if the testimom'- should be believed by the jury, would have authorized the jury, if they found the arrest was without cause, to have inferred such malice and criminal disregard of the rights of the female plaintiff as to justify them, in addition to compensatory damages, to assess exemplary damages against the defendants, provided the defendants Woodward & Lothrop were shown to have authorized such treatment and language before the arrest or approved the same afterwards.
From this situation on the trial, it resulted, we think; with reference to the claim of the plaintiff’s to recover punitive damages, that the defendants first had the right to offer evidence to defeat the plaintiff’s claim altogether, and secondly, to introduce evidence in migitation of damages of a punitive character.
The eleventh error assigned by the appellants is as follows : “ In refusing to allow the appellant Hendrick to testify concerning the result of the inquiries made by him of the young lady who sold the napkin rings to the female appellee, as to whether anything was missing from her counter.”
The defendant Hendrick had testified that he had seen Flinder taking the female plaintiff and her sister into a private room in the rear part of the store, Flinder leading Mrs. Ragland by the arm. Mrs. Hobson, the clerk of whom the female plaintiff had just purchased two napkin rings, who was temporarily away from her counter at the time of the arrest of Mrs Ragland, had testified that upon her return to the counter she had made an examination and found that a napkin ring was missing. Hendrick further testified that *232before going into the rear room he had asked Mrs. Hobson if anything was missing, and she thereupon made the examination before mentioned, and thereupon the defendant’s counsel asked Hendrick what was the result of this examination. Objection was made by the plaintiff, and the court refused to permit the question to be answered. Doubtless the reason governing the court may have been that any knowledge that Hendrick may have had must have depended on the statement of Mrs. Hobson, and therefore would be in the nature of hearsay testimony, and that none of the defendants could escape liability by showing that one of them had been told that a larceny had been committed. This view would have been correct had compensatory damages only been claimed in the declaration; but upon the charge of malice and .bmiality made in the declaration against all the defendants as the foundation for exemplary damages, it is pertinent evidence, tending to show with what motive the defendant Hendrick, subsequently, when appealed to by Mrs. Ragland in the rear room to interfere in her behalf, declined to do so, saying that it was a matter to be disposed of by Flinder. Nor is this view of the matter at all affected by the fact that on the trial of this cause Mrs. Hobson, after having first testified that a napkin ring was missing, subsequently, on being recalled, was led by some developments then made to her to conclude that she was mistaken in her previous statement that a napkin ring was missing. As relevant to the question of punitive damages, and the mitigation thereof, the inquiry is not so much what the fact was, but what did the defendants upon reasonable grounds believe it to be, at and during the time of the arrest. We think this testimony should have been admitted, and the proper direction given to the jury as to its application.
Again, the defendant Flinder, having testified that he had frequently induced persons who had stolen articles at the store of Woodward & Lothrop to surrender them before *233leaving the premises, was asked whether had ever interfered with any person on the report of another. He was further asked whether in the discharge of his duties he had been governed in his conduct towards persons in the store on the report of others or by his own personal knowledge. Upon objection being made generally by the plaintiffs, counsel for the defendants stated they proposed to follow these questions by showing that it was within the knowledge of Woodward & Lothrop whether Flinder took the report of anybody and acted on suspicion, or whether he governed himself solely by his own observations and knowledge before acting. The court refused to allow the witness to answer either question. No evidence, of a direct character at least, had been given to the jury that Woodward & Lothrop knew of the arrest until after the female plaintiff had been discharged by Flinder. The authority of Flinder to make arrests, and the extent of it from his employers, was left somewhat to inference and conjecture from the nature of his employment as a detective, and because to some extent he was allowed to exercise his own discretion.
It would seem to have been proper that Woodward & Lothrop, in order to repel the charge in the declaration that they had authorized and empowered Flinder to arrest and maltreat the plaintiff, should have been allowed to show that it was within their own knowledge that Flinder had not, prior to the arrest of the female plaintiff, accused any one of theft unless he had seen the theft committed. When the defendant Hendrick was examined as a witness, defendant’s counsel asked him whether, in' making the selection of Flinder (as a detective) he acted on his own knowledge or on recommendations of others; also, in determining to em ploy Flinder in the character he had mentioned (a detective), by what considerations, if any, he was actuated. Also, the following question: “ During the time that you have been engaged in the business which you describe yourself as having been engaged in, what, if any, knowledge have you as *234to the custom or rule in large houses, such as Woodward & Lothrop, in this and other cities, in the employment of other persons in the same character as that of Flinder ? ” On objection of the plaintiffs, the court declined to permit the witness to answer the three questions last stated. The witness had previously stated that he had been seven years with Woodward & Lothrop, and two years with another firm, in Washington, and prior thereto nearly all his life with a dry goods firm in New York City. As to the last question, it was stated by counsel for the defendants, before the court ruled upon its competency, that the object of the question was to show “ that in all establishments of this character, of which witness has knowledge, not only here but elsewhere, for the protection of customers against thefts and for the protection of proprietors of such establishments, a service of this kind has been demonstrated by experience to be a necessity, and that it is a rule and a custom throughout all establishments of this kind to retain a person in such a character for the purposes for which, as he (Hendrick) says, Flinder was employed.”
Again, Hendrick, having testified that, so far as he knew, he (Flinder) “ got no directions as to the discharge of his duties from any one but myself; he (Flinder) was directly under me (Hendrick);” the defendant’s counsel asked Hendrick the following question: “I will ask you directly whether the duties that were allotted to Mr. Flinder involved the right or duty on his part to apprehend anybody on suspicion ?” And also the following question: “ How far in the discharge of the duties of a detective was Mr. Flinder authorized by you to go?” Which questions were objected to generally by counsel, and the court refused to permit the witness to answer them.
In this class of cases it is incumbent on an employer to show that he has been prudent and careful in selecting his subordinates and diligent in supervising their conduct, to avoid punitive damages, or in mitigation thereof, for the *235wrongful conduct of the latter. For the purpose of rebutting any presumption from the evidence given by the plaintiff, that Woodward & Lothrop authorized or approved the treatment of Mrs. Ragland by Flinder as thus shown, they had the right to prove, in order to relieve themselves from the imputation of wrongful purpose or criminal indifference to others, that they had no knowledge of this occurrence until afterwards; that Flinder had never been authorized by them to so treat a customer; that so far as they knew he had never done so before in the three years’time he had been in their service. For the same purpose they might show' that they had made diligent inquiries of reputable and reliable parties as to the character of Flinder before his employment. For the purpose of showing that they were not resorting to an extraordinary, unusual or unnecessary measure in appointing Flinder to this service, they might prove the necessity for it, as demonstrated by common experience of mercantile houses of the class of this establishment, and that it was usual for houses of that class to employ persons as detectives in this and other cities. We think that such evidence was competent to go to the jury to be considered by them in determining whether to assess punitive damages, and, if so, in what amount in addition to proper compensatory damages.
The court instructed the jury as to its duty in awarding punitive damages, and referring to the charge of the court, it is apparent that the jury should have had given to them the testimony which was excluded from them by the court as before stated. The third prayer of the plaintiff, granted by the court and given to the jury, is as follows :
“ If the jury find from the evidence that the female plaintiff is entitled to recover damages, and if they shall further find that the wrongs and injuries inflicted upon her resulted from the willful, or reckless, or wanton, or malicious action of the defendant Flinder, or that they were inflicted by him with gross and reckless disregard of her rights while said defendant Flinder was acting in the line of his duty to and *236in the course of his employment by the defendants Woodward & Lothrop, pursuant to power and authority vested in him by them, or that his said employers, by their conduct, authorized or approved such said acts of the defendant Flinder, either before or after they were committed, and that said acts were done with the direction, assistance, or approval of'the defendant Hendrick, then the jury, in addition to such amount as will compensate the female plaintiff for the injuries sustained by her, may award the plaintiffs such additional sum as will serve as a warning and example to the defendants to prevent the recurrence of such act in the future, provided that the total amount of damages be within the sum claimed in the declaration.”
It may be questionable whether it is as clearly expressed as it should have been, that the power and authority that the defendants Woodward & Lothrop invested Flinder with, must be found by the jury to extend to an authorization of “the willful, or reckless, or wanton, or malicious action ” of Flinder, mentioned in the preceding part of the prayer, the danger being that the jury might infer that upon proof that Flinder was guilty of these wrongs, that the liability of Woodward & Lothrop would follow upon mere proof that they had employed Flinder to act as a detective, without more.
The remarks of the court immediately after giving the prayer to the jury were explicit in this respect, and the jury could not have been misled by any ambiguity in the prayer. But the court further charged the jury: “You are to inquire whether his (Flinder’s) acts as such agent were known by the employers, Woodward & Lothrop, and were ratified by them.” This from the context had reference to the acts of Flinder before the event which is the subject of this action. Surely some of the rejected testimony would have been quite pertinent in determining this important fact. The court instructed the jury that they might inquire whether Flinder’s acts as agent towards the plaintiff were *237ratified after they were committed, by Woodward & Lothrop, and that in that inquiry he thought they might “take into consideration very properly the circumstances indicating the fact that Flinder was criminally prosecuted, that since the prosecution, and since said act was committed, as charged against him, he has been retained in the employ of Woodward & Lothrop, and whether the act that he committed on that occasion is not by the defendants Woodward & Lothrop defended here.”
This is the only evidence referred to by the court as tending to prove ratification. While we think the weight of authority favors the admissability of such evidence to prove ratification in this class of cases, there are many respectable courts that have ruled to the contrary, and all agree that it may be of little or no weight unless it tends to show that the emplojmr who may have retained the employee in his service or defended the employee in the litigation resulting from the wrongful act, participated in the motive which actuated the employee in the commission of the wrongful act for which exemplary damages are claimed. In this case the evidence does not disclose the result of the prosecution in the Police Court, nor whether Woodward & Lothrop were present or what knowledge of the facts they had up to the trial of the case, though they may be presumed to know of the allegations in the declaration, after service of process on them in this case. The record discloses no evidence that Woodward & Lothrop were defending Flinder in this action. They defended themselves, at least, but what, if any, arrangement existed between the defendants as to maintaining the defense does not appear. While we are inclined to the opinion that this sort of evidence may properly go to the jury to prove ratification, it should always be accompanied with a statement by the court of its nature, purpose and weight, and we are, therefore, impressed with the belief that this statement of the court to the jury, without other *238explanation, tended to induce the jury to give to the facts embraced therein an undue weight and importance.
After quoting from a case indorsed by the Supreme Court of the United States some very appropriate extracts, the court closed his charge to the jury as follows:
“ The result of this, gentlemen, is that if you find that the plaintiff was innocent of this charge, then she is entitled to recover such damages at your hands as will compensate her for the injury from the acts committed against her, against such of the defendants as you may find chargeable therefor under the instructions of the court as given you. If you find that these defendants are all responsible for compensatory damages to the plaintiffs — that is, such damages as will compensate her for the injury — and you further find that the acts done to this female plaintiff were of such a wanton,|reckless, or malicious character, or so in disregard of her legal rights as to justify you in allowing such damages as will prove a penalty for such acts and a warning against the perpetration of any act of a similar character in the future, you should allow such damages as, in your judgment, you think proper upon that point.
“As to any one of these defendants, if you find that he is not responsible, under the instructions of the court, as given to you, you should return a verdict for him, and not against him.
“You can take the case.”
There can be no objection to the first full sentence in this part of the charge as to compensatory damages. But in the second full sentence, embracing the conditions upon which the jury might allow punitive damages, the court said: “ If you find that these defendants are all responsible for the compensatory damages to the plaintiffs . . . and you further find that the acts done to this female plaintiff were of such a wanton, reckless, or malicious character, or so in disregard of her legal rights,” etc., then the jury were to assess punitive damages. No allusion is made to any dis*239tinctions between the defendants, or any conditions upon which they were to assess punitive damages as against all of them. In this final statement of the result of the court’s discussion of the duties of the jury as to the assessment of damages there should have been included all of the conditions arising from the pleadings and evidence and imposed by the law affecting their duty in assessing damages if the verdict should be for the plaintiffs. Not to do so we think was erroneous, and we cannot say that it was not prejudicial to the defendants.
The question whether petit larceny is to be regarded as a felony in this District, and to what extent, if at all, has been very much discussed by counsel, but we do not think it is necessary to consider it in the disposition of this case. True, the justice presiding stated to the jury that in his j udgment petit larceny was not a felony in this District, and that the arrest of this female plaintiff by Flinder was unlawful, whether she was guilty of taking the napkin ring or not, but he gave to the jury, at the request of the defendants, and with the consent of the plaintiffs, the following instruction:
“ If the jury shall find from the evidence that the plaintiff Fannie O. Ragland was guilty of taking, in the store of the defendants Woodward & Lothrop, an article of merchandise, the property of the said Woodward & Lothrop, and that for such act, and for the purpose of recovering such article, and for no other reason or purpose, the said plaintiff was apprehended by the defendant Flinder and subjected to a search, then the jury is instructed that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover in this action.”
The court again expressly and definitely directed the jury, that if they found the female plaintiff guilty of the charge of larceny they should, notwithstanding the opinion he had expressed, return a verdict for the defendants. Under such circumstances it cannot be presumed that the jury were misled, or acted contrary to their duty. Presuming *240that the plaintiffs will make the same concession as to this question at another trial, as heretofore, this court prefers to reserve its decision as to it until some future occasion when the question is necessarily involved in the disposition of the case.
The j ury returned damages in a large sum, exactly one-third of which was remitted at the instance of the court, as a condition to the overruling of the motion of the defendants for a new trial. It is fair to presume that this verdict included punitive damages. How much, whether more or less than the amount remitted, is not known. Neither can we determine what effect the testimony which the court below rejected, and which wé are of the opinion should have been admitted, might have had on the jury, had the charge of the court been as we have before indicated it should have been. There are a number of exceptions embraced in the assignments of error of which we make no mention, because having carefully examined them we find no error in any one of them to the prejudice of the defendants. But finding that there is error as shown by the record in the particulars hereinbefore specified, we are constrained to reverse the judgment of the Supreme Court, to which court it is ordered that the case be remanded, and that a new trial be awarded.