Beard v. Bradshaw

1930 OK 1, 283 P. 990, 141 Okla. 50, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 7, 1930
Docket18627
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1930 OK 1 (Beard v. Bradshaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Bradshaw, 1930 OK 1, 283 P. 990, 141 Okla. 50, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 10 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

June 30, 1925, Edna Bradshaw, who will be herein referred to as plaintiff, resided in Frederick, Okla., and was engaged in conducting a beauty parlor in four rooms of a building rented at $30 per month from J. B. Beard, Jr., who will be herein referred to as defendant. Plaintiff occupied part of the rented space as a sleeping apartment and the balance for hex-business aforesaid. She seems to have purchased an undivided one-half of the business and equipment, consisting of facial chair, hair dryer, manicure table, shampoo board, electric hair clippers, violet ray, etc., from a Mrs. J. J. Allen, with whom she conducted the business a short while; later she purchased the remaining interest and ¡Mrs. Allen thereafter worked a short time as an employee of plaintiff. Plaintiff paid for this business and equipment about $650. She paid for the second one-half interest with the proceeds of a note executed by her and on which Mrs. Allen became surety for the sum of $250, payable to First National Bank of Frederick, Okla.

This is a suit by plaintiff for the value of her goods and for damages against defendant, whom she charges with the loss and conversion of same and the destruction of her business. The issues were tried before a jury, who found for plaintiff for $500, and from judgment thereon defendant appealed..

Plaintiff alleged and offered evidence tending to show that there was a hail storm in Frederick in April, 1925, which did considerable injury to buildings in said city and damaged the building in which the plaintiff was doing business, on account of which she had to move out, and that she removed hex- equipment into one of the rooms which suffered the least damage. Subsequently, she made arrangements to move to Wichita Falls, Tex., where she planned to work from June until September, when she was to return to and reopen her original quarters, which were meanwhile to be repaired.

Her plans were made known fully to defendant, who was agreeable. Before leaving, however, she took up the matter of the $250 note with the defendant, who was the active head of the bank and the person with whom she had negotiated the loan, in order to satisfactorily arrange same. Mrs. Allen, the surety, wished to be relieved of the obligation, and plaintiff desired an extension as to at least a part of the note. The defendánt agreed that if the plaintiff would pay the note down to $100, Mrs. Allen would be released from liability thereon. Whereupon plaintiff, through the aid of hex-father, secured suffieieixt money with which to reduce the note to $100, and at that time the defendant extended the note for 90 days, which expired August 18th; she then rented a room adjoining her former quarters, but in the same building, from the defendant for $7.50 per month, within which to store her goods and equipmeixt during her sojourn in Texas, and she and her mother placed most of the equipment in said room before she left. After she left, her mother was to complete the storing of the goods and lock the same up. Before leaving, the defendant requested that she have her insurance on the goods changed so as to protect the bank in the event of loss by fire, and this she did, and later delivered the policies in an envelope to the defendant, who noted in writing on the back of the envelope her street address and telephone number in *51 A\ ichita Falls. The storage room was protected by a Yale lock which could be locked but could not be unlocked without a key. Plaintiff took her key with her, but left her mother to complete the storing and locking the premises. Three days later, on July 3rd, plaintiff received information that her goods had been taken away, and returned from Wichita Falls to Frederick that evening. She, with her father, mother, and aunt, immediately went to see the defendant, Mr. Beard, and inquired as to the whereabouts of her $100 note and was told that it was in the bank. Plaintiff then asked the defendant who gave Mrs. Allen authority to take plaintiff’s goods out of the building, and Mr. Beard said, “I did.”

“Q. What did your father say? A. He asked him who gave Mrs. Allen the authority to take my household goods that were not mortgaged. Q. What did he say? A. My father said, ‘Did you give Mrs. Allen the authority to take her household goods?’ And he said, ‘Yes, and I told her to take everything that was up there.’ ”

Plaintiff says that when she first heard her goods were taken away, she called Mr. Beard over the telephone within 30 minutes and asked 'him if her goods were taken away from Frederick, and he told her that they were, and that they were taken to Wichita Falls, Tex.

“Q. Where is AVichita Falls? In Oklahoma? A. No, sir; in Texas. I asked who took them, and he said Mrs. Allen. I asked who gave her authority to take them, and he said, T did.’ Q. AVhat tone did he use? A. Very harsh tones. Q. That all that was said? A. That is about all that was said. Q. After that was when you came up to Frederick? A. That night.”

Plaintiff testified that under her arrangement with Beard, she intended to come back, and would have come back and opened up for business if her goods had not been taken away; that she was unable to buy other goods; that her business had increased in volume and that her annual earnings were considerable, and that she has been unable to secure remunerative employment since her goods were taken away; that if she had been notified of any anticipated foreclosure of the mortgage, she could have borrowed the money from one of the banks at Frederick and paid up the $100; that she told Mr. Beard that if required she could pay it up by borrowing it from another. Plaintiff is asked if she knew that Mrs. Allen took her property. She answered that Mrs. Allen told her that she came up and got her property with Mr. Beard’s permission. There is evidence to the effect that J. S. Bradshaw, father of plaintiff, heard a discussion of the note between Mr. Beard and the plaintiff in which Mr. Beard promised to extend the note for 90 days. Mrs. J. S. Bradshaw, mother of plaintiff, who resides at Manguin, testified that she packed plaintiff’s goods in the room; that she locked one of the two doors of the room and nailed a plank across the other, glie also heard Mr. Beard say that he had given Mrs. Allen authority to take the goods away from the room; that the room was rented from Mr. Beard for the purpose of storing the goods; that when she went to the building on the 3rd of July, the doors were open and the goods were gone.

Mrs. May Allen testified by deposition that she sold plaintiff the one-half interest in the business for $250; the note was payable in three months at the bank. Said that she did not know whether' plaintiff paid it or not; that she, the witness, paid it and assumed the mortgage; that “Mr. Beard told me that I would have to pay the note; Mr. Beard did not have anything to do with my taking the property except telling me to take it; he told me that I was entitled to it under the mortgage.”

Mrs. Alfred Orowley and Miss Louis Brink gave testimony corroborating the testimony heretofore quoted.

The defendant introduced evidence to the affect that the rear door of the room in which the goods were kept was not locked or fastened, but remained open. This is corroborated by Carl Cassidy.

Mrs. J. J. Allen testified that the property she sold to plaintiff was worth $300 and the business $500; that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 1, 283 P. 990, 141 Okla. 50, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-bradshaw-okla-1930.