Home Furniture Co. v. Hawkins

84 S.W.2d 830, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1935
DocketNo. 11746.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 S.W.2d 830 (Home Furniture Co. v. Hawkins) 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
Home Furniture Co. v. Hawkins, 84 S.W.2d 830, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 770 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JONES, Chief Justice.

Appellees, Ed Hawkins and wife, instituted this suit in the'county court of Dallas county at law No. 2 against appellant, Home Furniture Company, a corporation, for conversion of certain described personal property, and for the loss, through negligence, of certain other personal property. Jack Carter, appellant’s employee, was joined in this suit as a defendant, but judgment was entered in his favor and he is not a party to this appeal. The actual damages sought were alleged to be $272, and, in addition thereto, exemplary damages in the sum of $500. In a trial before a jury, judgment was rendered in favor of appellees for actual damages in the sum of $124.20 and $500 exemplary damages. The appeal has been duly perfected to this court, and the salient facts are:

Appellees, with their two children, in 1933 resided in a 4-room tenant house at 619 Millard street. Appellees are colored people and this is a resident section for colored people in the city of Dallas. On the morning of April 27, 1933, appellee’s wife was employed as a cook and left her home about 6 o’clock in the morning; the husband was employed down town and left *831 their home about 7:15 in the morning, locking all doors of the house and fastening the screens. The children were taken by him to the home of an uncle. Appellant is a corporation and sells furniture. Something over a year previous to the occasion in question, appellant had sold to a colored man, by the name of De Witt Gorman, some furniture including a bedroom suite, a rug, kitchen cabinet, and a breakfast suite. This sale was made -on the installment plan, on which weekly installments were supposed to have been made.

For approximately a year previous to the occasion in question, Gorman had made no payments, had moved from the address he gave when he bought the furniture, and had not been located. Jack Carter, an employee of appellant, in his testimony described himself as being what is called a “lost account” man. “We have a world of lost accounts, moves, and it is my job to go out and locate the moves, find them, and if they are bad accounts try to get them paying again or bring in the furniture. That is my duty.” Carter was paid a salary, and, in addition thereto, was given 5 per cent, of the appraised value of the furniture brought in on these poor accounts. His instructions were to try to persuade the principal of a bad account to agree to turn over to him the furniture, and if he failed to do so to repossess the furniture by court proceedings.

On the morning of April 27, 1933, Carter located Gorman on Fleming Street, and asked about the furniture. Gorman stated that the furniture was at 619 Millard street, and Carter caused Gorman to go with him to that address. When they arrived in front of appellees’ home, after failing to get Gorman to open the house with the skeleton key that he had, Carter opened the house with such key, went in with his 19 year old son and Gorman, according to Carter’s testimony. A witness, who was across the street at the time, testified that Gorman never went into the house. The result was that a bedroom suite, a rug, a breakfast suite, a United States mattress, and a Hoosier kitchen cabinet were carried out of the house and removed to appellant’s storeroom. Carter claims that Gorman told him he roomed at such place and that Gorman pointed out to him (Carter) the furniture he had bought from appellant, and that only this furniture was removed. There was another kitchen cabinet on the back porch at the time. There were 25 pounds of flour in the kitchen cabinet, and this was poured out in a pan on the floor, and two packages of bacon, aggregating seven pounds, were also thrown on the floor.

When Carter left the house, after the furniture was loaded onto the truck, he left all the doors open. When Ed Hawkins returned home about 4:30 in the afternoon, he discovered that his house had been forcibly entered, and there was missing the Hoosier kitchen cabinet, a rug, and a United States mattress belonging to him, also a bedroom suite belonging to Gorman, and a breakfast suite also belonging to Gorman; two suits of clothing, a pair of shoes belonging to Hawkins, and a 17-jewel ladies wrist watch, plated with white gold, were also missing. The 25 pounds of flour had been purchased the day before, and also the two packages of bacon had been purchased the day before. The flour had been scattered on the floor, and there were dog tracks over the flour. One package of bacon was missing. In other words, the bacon and flour were destroyed for use.

A short time after he arrived, appellee was informed that appellant’s employees had entered the house and removed the furniture. Fie at once telephoned appellant and informed it that it had moved furniture belonging to him, and was told that they would return such furniture to him. He waited a while and then he and his wife and another woman went to appellant’s place of business and lodged their complaint. At this time, Hawkins was informed that if he would tell them what had become of the oilstove purchased by Gor-man he could have the furniture belonging to him. This he told'them he could not do, because he did not know anything about the oilstove or where it was. After going to the police station and lodging their complaint, they were advised to consult an attorney, and this suit was instituted.

Appellees never bought any furniture from appellant; while some of the furniture bought by Gorman was in their house, it came there under the following circumstances: Gorman came to Hawkins a few weeks before the day in question and told him that he had been turned out of his house for failure to pay rent, and wanted to know if he could leave some of his furniture with appellees until he could get another house. He was permitted by appellee to do this, without paying rent and without appel-lees using such furniture. When Carter *832 forcibly entered the house, by use of the skeleton key on the morning in question, he never inquired as to who had charge of such house, but accepted Gorman’s word that he roomed at such house, though it was evident that some one else lived there. Gorman was not a witness in the case, had never roomed at appellees’ house, carried no key to appellees’ house, and did not have permission to enter same in their absence. Appellant never tendered to appel-lees their furniture, and never repudiated the act of Carter in forcibly entering the house and taking appellees’ furniture, but held the furniture and defended the case by filing a full and complete answer to the suit. The pleadings of both parties are sufficient to raise the questions discussed on this appeal.

The case was submitted on special issues, and the jury found that, on the occasion in question, appellees owned one United States mattress, one Hoosier kitchen cabinet, one 17-jewel wrist watch, one pair of shoes, two suits of clothing, 25 pounds of flour, and 7 pounds of bacon; but found that they did not own the rug in question.

Under appropriate submissions, the jury found the value of each of these items; totaling $124.20. The jury also found that appellant, through its agent or employee, Jack Carter, was guilty of negligence in leaving the two front doors of appellees’ home unlocked; that appellant, through its agent, entered the home on April 27, 1933, without the consent or knowledge of the appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.2d 830, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-furniture-co-v-hawkins-texapp-1935.