Crawford Undertaking Co. v. Herman Siegel, Inc.

230 S.W.2d 590, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2149
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 1950
Docket2898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 230 S.W.2d 590 (Crawford Undertaking Co. v. Herman Siegel, Inc.) 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
Crawford Undertaking Co. v. Herman Siegel, Inc., 230 S.W.2d 590, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2149 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

TIREY, Justice.

Herman Siegel, Inc., a California corporation, recovered judgment in the. sum of $661.00 with interest and costs (nonjury) against Crawford Undertaking Company, a Texas corporation, domiciled in Dallas, Texas. Defendant duly excepted and perfected its appeal. There was no request for findings of fact and conclusions of law and none were filed.

The judgment is assailed on five points. They are in effect: (1, 2 and 3) that it has no support in the pleadings, nor is it supported by competent evidence; (4) the court erred in admitting declarations made by Sholars not in the course of the negotiations to which such declarations referred, nor within the scope'of Sholars’ authority; *592 (5) the court erred in admitting testimony of the witness Thompson as to certain, declarations alleged to have been made by the witness Sholars to Thompson long after the alleged transaction relating to the burial of James Bishop and for that reason such declarations were hearsay and not-binding upon appellant.

Appellant has discussed these assignments together and they are so inter-related that we shall do likewise.

Plaintiff alleged substantially that it was in the retail jewelry business; that on the 28th of October, 1946, it entered into a conditional sales contract with James Bishop, a resident of Los Angeles, California, wherein it sold to Bishop a diamond ring fully described at a price of $900.00 and for which Bishop agreed to pay the sum of $15.00 weekly Until fully paid. It attached a copy of the conditional sales contract to the petition; that about May 15, 1947, James Bishop came to Dallas for a visit and a few days after he reached -Dallas he died; that at the time of Bishop’s death he owed plaintiff a balance of $661.00 on the ring; that immediately after the death of Bishop the ring was transferred and possession thereof given to defendant; that defendant took the ring and held it as guaranty or surety for Bishop’s funeral bill; that at the time the ring was delivered to the funeral home Bishop had no title other than a conditional one; that it immediately demanded possession of the ring from the funeral home because of its claim to title by virtue of its conditional sales agreement; thát default having been made in the payment of the purchase price of the ring and the plaintiff being informed that defendant had taken possession of said ring, plaintiff, through its agent, notified defendant on June 9, 1947 that title to the ring was'vested in it and demanded possession of the ring; that it demanded .possession again on June 16, 1947; that defendant admitted it had the ring but refused to give plaintiff possession, to which it was legally entitled; that by reason of defendant’s, failure to deliver possession of the ring to plaintiff defendant became liable and bound to plaintiff in damages in- the .amount of \the balance due and- owing on the ring, which plaintiff alleged was $661.-00, and prayed that it recover judgment for such sum.

Pertinent to this discussion defendant averred substantially that it did not have information sufficient to deny or admit the plaintiff’s allegations as to the sale of the ring to the deceased, nor its allegations as to reservation of title, nor its allegations as to the amount due and owing on the ring by deceased, and put the plaintiff to its proof as to these allegations. It further denied generally all of the remaining allegations. It further specially denied that the ring in question was ever transferred or tendered to it and that it had never been held by the defendant as security for James- Bishop’s funeral bill, and it further specially pleaded that the ring had never been in its possession; that no demand had ever been made upon it and it had never refused to deliver the ring because it had never been in its possession.

The sales contract tendered in evidence provides in part: “This is to- certify that I have purchased from Robbins in Los Angeles, California, merchandise of the agreed value of $900.00, for which I hereby agree to pay $15.00 per week on the 2nd day of November, 1946, and the further sums of $15.00 each succeeding week hereafter until said sum, together with the purchase price of all other merchandise which I may hereafter purchase, is paid in fulL All payments are to be made at the place of business of Robbins.” Robbins was the-trade-name under which the corporation-did business.

Plaintiff tendered its witness Charles-Lewis; who testified in part to the effect that he was formerly credit and collection-manager of the plaintiff; that while -he-was so employed, he received a letter on-June 9, 1947 from a brother of James Bishop advising it of the death of James. Bishop; that on the same day he called deceased’s widow by long distance telephone-in Dallas and in the conversation she stated that the diamond ring which her deceased' husband had purchased from Robbins had been delivered to the Crawford' Undertaking Company in Dallas to secure-the payment of bill for funeral -services for *593 James Bishop. “I told Mrs. Bishop that the diamond ring had not been paid for, and belonged to Robbins and she told me to get in touch with the funeral parlor, if Robbins was demanding return of the ring. I then called Crawford Undertaking Parlors. I told the man who spoke to me that I had just talked to Mrs. James H. Bishop in Dallas, Texas, and she told me her husband had died and that the Crawford Undertaking Parlors was going to conduct the funeral and burial of Mr. Bishop and that they had in their possession the diamond ring which her husband had purchased from Robbins. I informed him that the ring belonged to Robbins — that it had been purchased on a title retaining contract and had not been paid for and that we were demanding the return of the ring. I was told by the man who spoke to me that a diamond ring had been taken from the hand of the deceased, James H. Bishop, but he refused to state whether the ring would be returned to Robbins or deceased’s family or what disposition would be made of it.” This witness further testified to the effect that the value of the ring in question in June 1947 was $750.00 and that there was a balance due and owing on the ring of $661.00. The witness did not know the name of the man with whom he talked at the Crawford Undertaking Company, but the man with whom he talked stated that he was talking for the Crawford Undertaking Company. (Sholars, the general manager of the company, admitted that he' had a conversation with the party in California about the Bishop ring.)

Capitola Bishop, called by plaintiff, testified in part to the effect that she was the wife of James Bishop, deceased; that he came to Dallas in May 1947 and died on May 27th, after having been in Dallas approximately seventeen days. She further testified:

"Q. (By Mr. Jackson) : Well, now, let’s go back to this conversation you and I had two days ago. What was it you told me about a jewelry house out in California phoning you ? ■ A. I told you that about a month after my husband passed a jewelry company called and wanted to charge the call, collect and wanted to talk to me. However, I didn’t know at that time it was a jewelry company; it was just a man gave his name, so I didn’t accept the call, so maybe three or four days later the jewelry company called me and asked about the ring, and I told them the Crawford Undertaking Company had the ring — that was, Mr. Sholars had the ring—
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W.2d 590, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-undertaking-co-v-herman-siegel-inc-texapp-1950.