Beaumont, S. L. & W. Ry. Co. v. Daniels

204 S.W. 481, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 652
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 1918
DocketNo. 374.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 481 (Beaumont, S. L. & W. Ry. Co. v. Daniels) 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
Beaumont, S. L. & W. Ry. Co. v. Daniels, 204 S.W. 481, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 652 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This was an action for damages for humiliation and mortification, brought by appellee against the appellant. Judgment was rendered in the trial court for appellee. The cause was tried with a jury in the district court of Liberty county, on August 16, 1917. The jury, under instructions from the court, returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $500. Upon the verdict of the jury the court entered judgment against the Beaumont, Sour Lake & Western Railway Company for the sum of $500. Defendant filed motion for new trial, which motion was overruled by the court. The case is now duly before this court for review.

The plaintiff’s petition shows that the transactions out of which the claimed damages were alleged to have arisen center around the disappearance of an overcoat owned by a butcher boy selling his wares on a train being operated over the Beaumont, Sour Lake & Western Railway Company’s tracks between the stations of Beaumont, Jefferson county, and Hardin, Liberty county, Tex., on November 18, 1914. It is alleged that plaintiff was a passenger on said train on that date, going from Beaumont to Hardin, and that a few days after said date plaintiff received at Hardin a telegram reading as follows:

“Houston, Texas, 11/19/14. J. E. Daniel, Constable, Hardin, Texas. Please deliver my overcoat to conductor train number four going east Friday a. m. without fail. N. Boccaro, Conductor Fuel.”

It is alleged that, while said telegram was addressed to J. E. Daniel, it was intended for and delivered to T. E. Daniels, the plaintiff, who was at that time a constable. The sending of this telegram is made the basis for an allegation of damages on the theory that it carried with it slanderous implications of theft, and that the defendant would be liable therefor. There are further allegations that the station agent at Hardin circulated “in and around Hardin, and to divers people, that the plaintiff had stolen an overcoat from N. Boccaro on defendant’s train on November 18th.” This is made the basis of a claim for damages on the theory that such would import liability on the defendant. It was further alleged:

“Now, plaintiff further shows the court: That on the 24th day of November, 1914, he had occasion to be a passenger upon defendant’s train on a trip from said Beaumont to Hardin. That on said occasion said conductor, Fuel, was in charge of and operating said train, and said N. Boccaro was upon said train plying his business and trade as a news agent and butcher boy. That when said conductor took up plaintiff’s transportation, just after he (plaintiff) boarded said train at Grayburg, on defendants’ road, and the car in which plaintiff was riding was crowded with people, the conductor said to plaintiff, ‘What did you do with that overcoat you got the other night?’ Plaintiff advised him that he had never gotten an overcoat, and knew nothing about an overcoat, and the conductor then and there said in a loud, insulting, browbeating, and bullying manner: ‘You got that butcher boy’s overcoat the other night. You stole it that night, and you had better dig it up, or we will give you some trouble. We know too much about that coat.’ All of which was said in an insulting, loud, browbeating, and bullying manner, and caused plaintiff much mortification and humiliation; said conversation having taken place in the presence of a crowded car, most of the people whom plaintiff did not know. That plaintiff was a passenger on said train, and he had a right to be treated courteously and respectfully while he behaved himself and conducted himself as became a passenger. That he did conduct himself in a proper and gentlemanly manner, and plaintiff was entitled to courteous treatment by said conductor and by all employes, and was entitled to protection by said conductor from employes, passengers, or other people having a right to be on said train, or engaged in a business on said train. That said charge made by the conductor was false and slanderous, and has damaged plaintiff to the extent of $5,000.”

The defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial.

[1] The record shows that on November 18, 1914, Boccaro was acting as newsboy on what was known as the Frisco west-bound train, running from New Orleans, La., to Houston, Tex., passing through the city of Beaumont, and thereafter through the station of Hardin; that on that date said Boccaro had an overcoat and same disappeared; that the telegram previously copied herein was sent by Boccaro; and that he signed his name and the name of conductor, Fuel, thereto. No evidence was introduced that the station agent circulated in and around Hardin that the plaintiff had stolen an overcoat from Boccaro, and there is nothing to even suggest that any such rumor could be traced to defendant. If it could be said that there was any evidence that the rumor was circulated by the said agent, it positively cannot be said that, in circulating such rumor, he acted in any sense as the representative of the defendant, or within the scope of his employment by it. It is further shown that T. E. Daniels was a passenger on the easL bound Frisco train on November 24, 1914. The train was in charge of Conductor Fuel, and N. Boccaro was on the train on that date as a newsboy. It is also shown that *483 a conversation took place between the plaintiff and said newsboy. Plaintiff testified as follows:

“The conductor took up my fare on the night of the 24th. When he came to me, I handed him my pass; he just looked at it. I handed him my transportation. He just looked at it, and says, ‘What did you do with that butcher boy’s coat you taken off the train the other night?’ And I told him I hadn’t taken any butcher boy’s coat off the train. He said, ‘Yes, you did.’ I said: ‘No, sir; I never taken any butcher boy’s coat.' I said: T had this one, this is the only coat I had. I had my overcoat on.’ He says, ‘Yes, you did, you taken that butcher boy’s coat off.’ He said, ‘You never had any coat at all when you got on the train, and you taken one off.’ He says, ‘You had better dig that coat up.’ He says: ‘We are going to give you trouble. We know too much about it.’ He said that they knew too much about the coat, said I had better dig it up. I told him I hadn’t got it. I told him — he said they were going to give me trouble about it, and I told him to go ahead and do it. He said, ‘You stole the butcher boy’s coat off of the train that night.’ He turned around and walked off then. After that, on the train, the butcher boy, Boccaro, approached me and asked me what I had done with the coat. I told him I hadn’t had his coat. He says: ‘Yes, you did. You got my coat down from out of the rack and wrapped a little boy up in it when you got on the train.’ I told him I had not. I said, T wrapped him up in my coat.’ He says, ‘OK no, you didn’t,’ says: ‘You got my coat and taken it off the train when you left. You stole it.’ I told him he was a damned liar. He turned around and walked off.”

He further testified:

“When they accused me of stealing the coat, I was coming from Beaumont. I got on the train at Grayburg. I was in the smoker. I think I sat somewhere along about the middle of the car. The conductor was the first one of the train crew that I saw after I got on the train; that was when he came to take up my transportation. I had not seen or talked to any other member of the train crew before that.

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204 S.W. 481, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaumont-s-l-w-ry-co-v-daniels-texapp-1918.