Frontier Theatres Inc. v. Brown

362 S.W.2d 360, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 1972
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 1962
Docket5544
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 362 S.W.2d 360 (Frontier Theatres Inc. v. Brown) 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
Frontier Theatres Inc. v. Brown, 362 S.W.2d 360, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 1972 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

LANGDON, Chief Justice.

On May 11, 1958 fire destroyed a drive-in theatre owned by appellant, Frontier Theatres, Inc., located near the City of Pecos, in Reeves County, Texas. Certain household furnishings, clothing, money, jewelry and other personal property belonging to an employee of appellant (Mrs. Blanche Elizabeth Brown), not used by her in the employment, were lost or destroyed in the fire. Mrs. Brown and her husband brought suit in the District Court of Reeves County against appellant for damages sustained by reason of the loss of her personal property.

The cause came on for trial before the court and a jury, but by agreement of the parties the jury was dismissed and the case tried to the court. From a judgment in favor of Mrs. Brown and her husband, fixing liability against appellant and awarding damages to the appellees in the sum of $21,-253.00, together with interest thereon from the date of loss, appellant has prosecuted this appeal.

The judgment entered by the court below allowed recovery for all the property allegedly lost by appellees in the fire. In addition to the damages allowed for the customary household furnishings, clothing and personal effects ordinarily possessed by families for their personal use and convenience at home, the trial court allowed recovery for the loss of $828.00 in cash and $10,121.08 for the loss of certain-“irreplaceable goods and chattels”, among which (with the values thereof as found by the court) were the following: A coin collection, $666.66; two slumber spreads, $666.66 ; one wedding veil, shoes and point lace collar,. $666.66; one key-wound heirloom watchr $666.66; a deed signed by U. S. Grant,. $166.66; one emerald ring, $733.33, and $200.00 for the loss of another such ring;, one 36-cal. Colt and holster, $500.00; one English letter box, $233.33; one cameo pin; $333.33, together with many other presumably rare and valuable items.

This case is unique because it is a suit by an employee arising out of an accident on the employer’s premises, in which the employee seeks to recover damages from her employer, not for any personal injury, but solely for the accidental loss of personal property belonging to such employee, not used in the master’s business, destroyed as the result of a fire on the master’s premises.

While it would seem that such loss by an employee would not be an infrequent occurrence, we have been unable to find any Texas cases involving a comparable fact situation, nor have we been able to find a case from any other jurisdiction precisely in point.

Obviously, since no personal injuries are involved in this litigation, appellant’s liability, if any, to appellees, solely for loss of personal property, cannot be based upon the Workmen’s Compensation laws of this state, and we are unaware of the existence of any other statutory authority under which liability might be imposed here. Consequently, we have concluded that if the trial court’s judgment, decreeing appellant liable to ap-pellees, is to be affirmed it must be upon rules and principles applicable at common law.

The record in this case is voluminous (357 pages). It reflects that appellant is a corporation doing business in Texas with its office and principal place of business located at Dallas. It owns and operates a number of theatres in Texas and New Mexico and was the owner of the Eagle Drive-In The-atre near Pecos at the time of its destruction *364 by- fire on May 11, 1958. Mr. Floyd H. Scott, of Richardson, Texas, testified that he was one of appellant’s district managers; that the company owned three theatres in Pecos, including the Eagle Drive-In; that these theatres were within the district over which he had general supervision. He stated that it was a policy of the company in any city or town where it had more than one theatre to employ a local or city manager as its agent or contact in such city; that Mr. Russell Ackley was appellant’s local manager in Pecos at the time in question, and that he in turn had authority to hire such personnel as was required to operate the theatres, including the authority to hire managers for each of the three the-atres.

It is undisputed that some time prior to August of 1957 appellant’s local manager, Mr. Russell Ackley, employed Mrs. Brown and two of her minor sons, Larry Paul Brown and Roger Dale Brown, to work for appellant at its Eagle Drive-In Theatre near Pecos. She was placed on the payroll on August 24, 1957 but, according to Mrs. Brown’s own testimony, she had spent most of the preceding month of July and the early part of August on appellant’s premises at the drive-in, presumably to familiarize herself with the premises and the work she was to perform. On August 24, 1957 Mrs. Brown, together with her two minor sons, commenced their employment with appellant. They moved into and occupied an apartment located on the premises, bringing with them a trailer-house and many other personal possessions. Part of these personal possessions were placed by plaintiff in the apartment, and others were left in the trailer-house. Mrs. Brown placed the house trailer at the place it was located at the time of the fire, and connected — or caused it to be connected — to appellant’s butane gas system. Some time thereafter Mrs. Brown also brought other personal property on the premises, including a two-wheel trailer and a truck (not otherwise described), both of which contained a number of other personal items belonging to Mrs. Brown and her family. The two vehicles (truck and two-wheel trailer) were brought upon appellant’s premises and placed where they were at the time of the fire without express authority from Mr. Ackley, but without any objection on his part.

In addition to Mrs. Brown and her two sons, the Brown family consisted of Mrs. Brown’s husband (a disabled oil-field driller), and a minor daughter, Judy. Other members of the family were grown or married and did not live on the premises; consequently, they are not directly involved in this litigation. Mrs. Brown’s husband, although a necessary party, was not an employee of appellant. Therefore neither he nor Judy (the Brown’s minor daughter) is otherwise connected with this suit.

The apartment with which we are concerned here formed the base of appellant’s theatre screen. The entire structure is referred to in the record as the “tower structure”. In its findings of fact the trial court found that “such tower structure was of a total height of approximately 60 feet, the lower 8 or 8½ feet of which contained an apartment for residential purposes. The upper 51½ or 52 feet of such structure was so constructed as to afford a theatre screen oil the inside portion thereof and a large neon sign on the exterior thereof”. The trial court also found that the fire in question was caused by and resulted from defects in the electrical wiring connected to the neon sign in that portion of the tower structure located above the apartment occupied by ap-pellees.

The record reflects that the contract of employment under which Mrs. Brown and her two sons commenced their employment with appellant was negotiated entirely by Mrs. Brown. Larry Brown, the older of the two boys, had previously worked for appellant at its theatres in Crane, Texas for a period of two and a half years, as a motion picture projectionist, and was engaged in this work at appellant’s Eagle Drive-In on the night of the fire in question. The other son, Roger Dale Brown, was the

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Bluebook (online)
362 S.W.2d 360, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 1972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frontier-theatres-inc-v-brown-texapp-1962.