Copeland v. Porter
This text of 169 S.W. 915 (Copeland v. Porter) 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.
Opinion
Plaintiff in error sued defendants in error for actual and exemplary damages arising from the alleged conversion by defendants in error of certain personal property or household goods of the plaintiff in error. There was a trial by jury, with verdict and judgment for defendants in error.
In deference to the verdict of the jury the. record will support the following conclusions of fact: About September 12, 1912, defendants in error rented plaintiff in error a residence in Sherman, Tex. Rent was paid to November 12, 1912. A few days subsequent to renting the residence plaintiff in error left Sherman with the avowed intention of going to Ladonia to secure employment picking cotton. When plaintiff in error left she locked the house containing her furniture and household goods, as well as some belonging to a local furniture dealer, which had been conditionally sold or leased to plaintiff in error under written agreement, by the terms of which it was agreed that the owners of the furniture might, in default of the conditions of the sale or lease, enter any premises containing same, during plaintiff in error’s absence, whether the house containing same was closed or opened, and take possession of the furniture and remove same. In December, after plaintiff in error left, the owners of the furniture sought permission of defendants in error to enter the premises in order to remove the furniture. At various times in January they became urgent for such admission, and defendants in error promised that February 1st following they would unlock the door and permit removal of the fur *916 niture. Defendants in error thereupon called upon plaintiff in error’s mother in an attempt to locate plaintiff in error, whom they were unable to locate. ’ At the request of her mother the matter was deferred until February 6th. Plaintiff in error’s mother being unable to locate her daughter, defendants in 'error opened the house February 6th, and permitted the removal of the furniture delivered to plaintiff in error under the written contract. What transpired after the removal of the leased furniture is conflicting. Defendants in error offered testimony tending to show that all the remaining furniture, ex■cept some articles hereafter referred to, were removed by the mother of plaintiff in error. Plaintiff in error offered testimony tending to show that all the balance of the furniture was appropriated by defendants in error or iby others as the result of defendants in error’s negligence in leaving the house in such condition that others could enter. Defendants in error admitted tailing a few articles left by plaintiff in error’s mother from the house for the purpose of earing foy them for plaintiff in error, and to whom the articles were tendered, but which she declined to receive. Defendants in error, in an attempt to locate plaintiff in error, wrote her at Dadonia, but got no reply.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
169 S.W. 915, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeland-v-porter-texapp-1914.