Galveston Hotel Co. v. Goggan

253 S.W. 694
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1923
DocketNo. 8281.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 694 (Galveston Hotel Co. v. Goggan) 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
Galveston Hotel Co. v. Goggan, 253 S.W. 694 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Goggan sued both appellant hotel company, which owned and operated the Galvez Hotel at Galveston, and appellee express company, which did an express business between there and Houston, for damages in the sum of $419.65 for the loss of his hand bag and its contents, which he valued at that amount. He alleged that on leaving the hotel he left the hand bag in the custody of the hotel' company at Galveston, but subsequently requested it to transport the same to him" at Houston; that the hotel company failed and refused to so transport the bag, but converted it to its own use. By alternative averments he further alleged:

That the hotel company “did, as requested by plaintiff, deliver the said baggage, bag, and Contents as above set out to the defendant company express, and ordered the same shipped to the plaintiff in Houston, Tex., with the understanding and agreement that the plaintiff would pay the usual and customary charges of transportation and the plaintiff was able, ready, and willing to pay the usual and customary charge of transportation, and the defendant express company, received said hand bag, baggage, and contents set out above, and agreed to deliver the same to the plaintiff at his residence in Houston, Tex., and, though plaintiff has made frequent demand on said defendant express company, said company refuses to deliver to plaintiff the hag, baggage, and contents set out above, and appropriates the same to their own use and benefit, all to plaintiff’s actual damage as above set out.”

The hotel company answered, denying that it had either refused to ship or had converted the baggage; alleging that it had, as requested by plaintiff, duly delivered the same to the express company, which had receipted it therefor.

The express company, in turn, answered *695 by denying that it had received and receipted for the bag for such shipment, but further averred that, if it be shown that it had, it had done so under a valuation of $10 placed thereon by the hotel company, as the agent of plaintiff and had, through one of its drivers, taken the property to its depot in Galveston, beyond which it could not trace it; that, as was well known at the time to the hotel company, it charged a higher rate and exercised greater care in handling shipments exceeding $50 in value than was done with reference to those under or up to that amount, and that such placing of the $10 value thereon caused it to exercise only that degree of care which its rates required for shipment carrying that valuation; that, had the value given to it at the time of tender for shipment as being in excess of $50, it would have exercised the greater degree of care accordingly, and the shipment, in all probability, would not have been lost.

The cause was submitted to a jury upon a large number of special issues, and upon the return of answers thereto, the court entered judgment in favor of plaintiff against the defendants jointly for the sum of $50, with interest, and against the hotel company alone for the additional sum of $369.65, with interest.

The express company, being satisfied with the lower court’s action, has not appealed, but appears in this court by brief asking that the adjudication made below as to it be affirmed. The hotel company, however, complains of the judgment for any amount against it through a number of assignments of error. Its chief contention is that, the plaintiff below having by his pleadings predicated his right to recover against it — after having charged it with having come into possession of his hand bag as an innkeeper— solely upon its alleged failure to deliver the same to the express company for transportation to Houston and its conversion thereof to its own use, and the jury having found that it did not convert the property but did deliver it to the express company, as directed by him, appellant’s motion for judgment in its favor on the verdict should have been granted.

We think the position well taken, and that, under the pleadings and the unchallenged findings of the jury, appellant was not liable. The pleadings of the plaintiff below were subject to no other reasonable interpretation than that thus put upon them. He simply charged that appellant had come into possession of his baggage as an innkeeper, whose guest he had been; that after he departed he requested it to transport the bag from its hotel at Galveston to his residence in Houston; that it neglected, failed, and refused to do so, but converted the same to its own use and benefit; then alternatively, as above quoted in full, that it duly delivered the bag to the express company; and that the latter failed to transport it to him. Obviously, appellant not being in the transportation business, but thus averred to be an innkeeper'only and in that capacity to have been intrusted with his baggage, he merely meant to declare that it had failed and refused to deliver the bag to the express company, and had converted it to its own use and benefit. No other cause of action is asserted against appellant.

Issue No. 23, as submitted to the jury, was this: .“Did the defendant, Galveston Hotel Company fail and refuse to deliver plaintiff’s bag and contents to defendant, Wells Fargo & Go. Express, and convert the same to its own use and benefit?” To which the jury answered, “It did not.” There is no attack upon this finding, and we think it alone ac-qiiits appellant of any liability to appellee Goggan for the loss of the bag.

This conclusion is but rendered stronger by the jury’s answers in response to further questions as follows:

“Special Issue No. 5: If you have answered the plaintiff did instruct the defendant hotel company to ship said hand bag and contents by express, then answer whether or not said Goggan instructed said hotel company, or any of its agents or employees to ’value said hand bag and contents at any sum, and if so at what sum.” Answer: “No.”
“Special Issue No. 6: Did the Galvez Hotel deliver to defendant express company, on or about September 15, 1917, for shipment to I. E. Goggan, at Houston, Tex., a hand bag?” Answer: “Yes.”
“Special Issue No. 7: Tf you have answered special issue No. 6 ‘Yes,’ and only in that event, you will answer the following question: Was the hand bag the same hand bag as alleged and described in plaintiff’s petition?” Answer: “It was.”

There is likewise no claim that any of these findings are unsupported by the evidence. Indeed, the express company in the trial admitted receiving the bag from appellant, taking it from the hotel to its depot in Galveston, and there losing all further trace of it. So that, the cause of action as against appellant being based solely upon the averment that it failed to deliver the baggage to the express company and converted the same to its own use and benefit, every fact essential to its establishment was thus expressly found not to have existed.

In this connection, while the proof showed, and the jury also found, that appellant placed a valuation of $10 on the bag in turning it over to the express company for shipment to Houston, it will be noted that no liability was claimed against appellant on that account; no question of negligence on its part in placing a valuation thereon of less than $50 was raised in the pleadings of ap-pellee Goggan, and it follows that all of the special issues submitted s.eeking to elicit

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-hotel-co-v-goggan-texapp-1923.