Daniels v. Conrad

331 S.W.2d 411, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1777
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1959
Docket15529
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 331 S.W.2d 411 (Daniels v. Conrad) 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
Daniels v. Conrad, 331 S.W.2d 411, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1777 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

Rule 418, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure provides that that appellants’ brief “should contain * * * a short, plain statement of the nature of the case without argument.” The preliminary statements of appellants are not in conformity with the Rule. They are highly argumentative and partisan to which appellees reply in kind. In consequence we must rely largely upon pleading of the parties for background of points hereinafter discussed.

The suit of Robert Daniel (now deceased) against his sisters Mary Conrad and Marjorie Winn comprehended two charges of malicious prosecution; mental anguish suffered perforce of their maliciously concealing the whereabouts of his mother Beulah Daniels during her last days; willful detention of his automobile, along with lesser allegations of damages. On pretrial the court had sustained special exceptions in effect to all causes of action other than for detention of car. A judgment of dismissal was ordered with respect to these several counts on plaintiff’s refusal to amend, with exceptions taken; the parties then proceeding to trial on the latter phase of said litigation. A jury finding of $300 as damages for loss of use of the Daniel Ford car was disregarded on motion of ap-pellees non obstante veredicto and judgment rendered for defendants on dual grounds of limitations and no evidence in support. The motion of plaintiffs for new trial was then overruled and appeal taken.

The original petition of Daniel was filed in August of 1955, and the case tried on Third Amended Petition filed in July 1957. Petitioner Daniel died in Fall of 1957; with independent executors William Andress, Jr., Sarah Daniels and A. M. Pate, Jr., substituted as parties plaintiff. The suit was heard and final judgment rendered in May 1958.

Material to appellants’ points 1 through 4 are their two counts of malicious prosecution; “2. Mary Conrad and Marjorie Winn are sisters of plaintiff Robert N. Daniel, and for a period of about one year prior to her death kept their mother, Beulah Daniel, in the physical possession of one or both of themselves at substantially all times, not letting her out of the presence of one of them, and because of the fact that she was aging and feeble, they coerced and influenced the late Beulah Daniel to act in accordance with their wishes and desires. In *414 their attempt to influence their mother against plaintiff, all three defendants concerted together to impress upon her that plaintiff was crazy, and when he was taken ill in March of 1954 they placed him in the Schwenkenberg mental sanitarium, without advising Beulah Daniel that it was a mental sanitarium, and then subsequently told her that he had been confined for lunacy, and thereupon persuaded her, in the Fall of 1954, to file lunacy charges against the plaintiff, which they kept pending for a number of months, spreading word of the pendency thereof among numerous relatives, friends and acquaintances, including Henry B. Daniel, Mrs. R. H. Dearing, Joe E. Davis, Mrs. Evelyn DeLee Scott, and other persons unknown to this plaintiff, but well known to the defendants, in order to damage the plaintiff and humiliate him and keep him from securing employment, but when the case finally came on for trial, no witnesses appeared against him, and he was adjudicated not to be of unsound mind. Such action was instituted at the instance of the defendants, and was done maliciously and with intent to harm and damage plaintiff, and without intent of prosecuting said proceedings to judgment, and therefore constituted malicious prosecution. By reason of such malicious prosecution plaintiff has suffered damage. Plaintiff says that his damages by reason of such malicious prosecution amount to $15,000.00. * * * 3. On December 13, 1954, defendants induced Beulah Daniel to file cause No. 98211 entitled Beulah M. Daniel vs. Robert N. Daniel, alleging that this plaintiff was a chronic alcoholic addicted to barbiturates who had carried on a course of misconduct consisting of repeated acts of violence, wickedness, and incivility toward his mother, threatening her life and well-being, and preventing her from taking necessary insulin and otherwise insulting her, and asking an injunction against this plaintiff from seeing his mother. Although said cause was pending upon the docket of the Court for more than eight months, during all of which this plaintiff as defendant therein tried to get the case set for trial and to have his mother produced in Court in person to determine whether she would testify publicly and under oath to any wrongful acts on his part against her when she was not under the influence of the defendants, the defendants secreted her from the processes of law and refused to produce her, so that finally judgment was entered in that case in favor of this plaintiff. Meanwhile, the defendants herein circulated to the persons named in the preceding paragraph the statements contained in said petition, well knowing them to be false, and did so maliciously with intent to harm and damage this plaintiff. Such action constituted malicious prosecution, and plaintiff has suffered damage as a result thereof. Plaintiff says that his damages amount to the sum of $15,000.”

The trial court sustained the following exceptions directed to the foregoing paragraphs 2 and 3 of amended petition: “(f) To the allegations ‘By reason of such malicious prosecution plaintiff has suffered damage. Plaintiff says that his damages by reason of such malicious prosecution amount of $15,000.00.’ for such allegations are not more than conclusions of law and no facts whatever are set out to support such conclusions, (g) To the entire paragraph 2 for the reason there is no allegations of fact concerning the elements of damage and none are supplied in the remainder of the petition. * * * (d) To the allegation ‘and Plaintiff has suffered damage as a result thereof, Plaintiff says that his damages amount to the sum of $15,000.00.’ for the reason same is a pure conclusion without allegation of fact to support any element of damage, (e) To the entire paragraph 3 for the omission of any allegations of fact regarding damages which would fairly apprise your defendants of what plaintiff complains.” Here it will be noted that the quoted exceptions relate solely to the $15,000 allegation of damages that concludes each count; being sustained as not alleging sufficient elements of damage on which to *415 predicate their general conclusion of a “$15,000.00” damage in each instance.

The points of appellants complaining of above Court rulings will be considered together, but must first be quoted: “First Point: An allegation that by reason of malicious prosecution of lunacy proceedings plaintiff has suffered damage which is in the amount of $15,000.00, is sufficient pleading against a special exception that it is a legal conclusion with no facts pleaded to support it. Second Point: An allegation that by reason of malicious prosecution of injunction proceedings against him plaintiff has suffered damage which is in the amount of $15,000.00, is sufficient pleading against a special exception that it is a legal conclusion with no facts pleaded to support it. Third Point:

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Bluebook (online)
331 S.W.2d 411, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-conrad-texapp-1959.