Baker Co. v. Turpin

53 S.W.2d 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1932
DocketNo. 1231.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 154 (Baker Co. v. Turpin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker Co. v. Turpin, 53 S.W.2d 154 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

CADLAGHER, C. J.

This appeal is prosecuted by the Baker Company, appellant herein, from a judgment of the district court in favor of Mrs. Sarah Turpin, appellee herein, for actual and exemplary damages for false imprisonment and forcible ejectment from its hotel building in the city of Dallas.

Appellee, at the time the events occurred out of which this suit arose, was Mrs. Sarah Mitchell, a widow. Before the trial she married her coappellee, E. G. Turpin, who thereupon joined her in this suit. The. Baker Company is a corporation and at the time the events occurred as aforesaid, operated the Baker Hotel in said city. Mr. Fenton H. Baker was then and there vice president of the company and general manager of said hotel. Henry Dove was an assistant manager and O. B. McCormick was manager or foreman of a barber shop maintained by appellant in said building. Appellee was on August 21, 1929, and had been for more than a year prior thereto, an employee of appellant. She had served for several months when first employed as cashier in the barber shop and for the remainder of the time as cashier in the caveteria, maintained by appellant in said building, with certain additional duties not necessary to describe. On the date aforesaid she was advised that Mr. Baker, the manager, had ordered her discharged. According to her testimony, she continued at the request of the auditor, to discharge her duties as cashier at the caveteria until after lunch time. She further testified that next morning she was checked out by the auditor and received her salary up to and including the day before; that she then attempted to see Mr. Baker and secure reinstatement but that he was busy; that she then went to the caveteria for lunch; that while eating her lunch ■ she discovered that McCormick, the manager of the barber shop, was sitting at a nearby table; that she went to the table where he was sitting and had a conversation with him; that she charged him with having been the cause of her discharge and asked him to meet her outside and talk the situation over with her, and that he agreed to do so. There is some conflict in the testimony with reference to her manner and what was said at the time. She further testified that she then left the caveteria and went upstairs to see a party about securing another position; that the party was out and that she then went to the barber shop to see and talk with Mr. McCormick; that he was not in; that the young lady manicurist in the shop had done her work for a long time and she decided to have a manicure; and that she wás so engaged until she was forcibly ejected from the building, as hereinafter recited. McCormick was called as a witness by appellant. He testified that he told appellee in the conversation at the cave-teria that, if she wanted to see him, she would have to see him in the barber shop; that he would be there in a few minutes and that he would,not go elsewhere to talk to her. He further testified that about twenty minutes after the conversation in the caveteria he went to the door of the barber shop and saw appellee; that he then went to Mr. Baker and told him that he did not want appellee in the barber shop, that she had raised a row in the caveteria; that Mr. Baker told him to report the matter to Dove and have him report to the officers, and that he conveyed this message to Dove. Dove testified that he then went to the barber shop and found appellee at the manicure table; that he told her that he did not want her business and would like for her to leave the shop and stay out of it; that she declined to go ; that he then reported to Mr. Baker, who instructed him to call an officer. Dove further testified that he then sent for a policeman *156 and told him, when he arrived, that appellee had been cutting up in the caveteria and that he wanted him to make her behave or take her out. The policeman testified that Love told him to go down to the barber shop and remove appellee, that she was “raising Gain.” He further testified that when he reached the barber shop appellee was having a manicure. Appellee testified in this connection that said policeman, and another who came with him, took her by the arm, Jed her out of the barber shop, up the stairs, out of the building, onto the street, and to the corner of the block, and there turned her loose.

The case was submitted on special issues, in response to which the jury returned answers in substance as follows: (1) Appellee did not leave the barber shop voluntarily after talking with the policemen therein. (2) Appellee was compelled by the officer to leave the barber shop. (3) Such compulsion by such officer was without probable cause and was (4) at the instance of Henry Love. (6) Said Love, assistant manager of the hotel, without probable cause, instructed the officer to remove appellee from the barber shop. (6) He did not have reasonable ground at the time of such removal to believe that she would create a disturbance in said barber shop if not removed therefrom. (7) Said Love, at the time he procured the presence of the policemen, was acting withjn the scope of his authority as assistant manager of the hotel.

The jury, in response to further issues submitted, assessed appellee’s actual damage for physical and mental pain, suffering, humiliation, and mortification, at the sum of $500, and awarded her exemplary damages in the further sum of $500.

Opinion.

Appellant presents several assignments of error in which it asserts that the court overruled various special exceptions addressed by it to appellee’s petition, and erred in doing so. The transcript fails to show that such special exceptions were ever called to the attention of the court or that any rulings thereon were made. Appellant presents another assignment in which it complains of the action of the court in sustaining a general demurrer to a trial amendment filed by it. The transcript contains the trial amendment referred to in said assignment and a general demurrer thereto by appellee. No order sustaining said demurrer was entered upon the minutes of the court. The court, however, indorsed on said trial amendment that he had permitted the same to be filed but that he had sustained appellee’s general demurrer thereto. Said indorsement could not in any event have a higher standing than a formal bill of exceptions showing such action, duly allowed by the court and filed as a part of the record in the cause. Rulings of the trial court on demurrers are part of the record and must be entered on the minutes and copied in the transcript. They cannot be perpetuated and presented for review on appeal by a bill of exceptions. Hall v. Williams & Ellis (Tex. Civ. App.) 267 S. W. 520, 521, par. 1, and authorities there cited; Ineeda Laundry v. Newton (Tex. Civ. App.) 33 S. W.(2d) 208, 210, par. 1; Epting v. Nees (Tex. Civ. App.) 25 S.W.(2d) 717, 719, par. 9 (writ refused); Lerer v. Raines (Tex. Civ. App.) 27 S.W.(2d) 621, 622, par. 2, and authorities there cited; International-Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Straub (Tex. Civ. App.) 7 S.W.(2d) 112, 113, par. 1; Willis v..Graf (Tex. Civ. App.) 257 S. W. 664. All the aforesaid assignments are therefore overruled.

Appellant presents an assignment of error in which it complains of the action of the court in admitting in evidence, over its objection, the testimony of appellee that she was the mother, of two small boys; that they lived with her at the time the events under consideration occurred; and that they still lived with her. Appellant supports this assignment by reference to the statement of facts, which merely shows that it entered a general objection to such testimony.

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53 S.W.2d 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-co-v-turpin-texapp-1932.