Jesse French Piano & Organ Co. v. Phelps

105 S.W. 225, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 385, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 225 (Jesse French Piano & Organ Co. v. Phelps) 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
Jesse French Piano & Organ Co. v. Phelps, 105 S.W. 225, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 385, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 511 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

RICE, Associate Justice.

—This suit was brought by appellee against appellant to recover damages for trespass alleged to have been "committed by the agents, servants and employes of appellant .upon the property of appellee. The petition charges that on the 10th of December, 1904, appellee was in possession of a dwelling house in the town of Murphysboro, Illinois, and that on said date appellant broke into said house and took therefrom a piano; that it left the house open and insecure, in consequence of which many articles of household and kitchen furniture, wearing apparel and valuable books had been taken, which belonged to appellee, and which he had not been able to recover, although diligent search had been made therefor, claiming actual damages in the sum of $306.75, and exemplary damages in the sum of $600.

*387 There was a verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of $301.75, from which appellant prosecutes this appeal.

It appears from the evidence that appellee moved from Murphysboro, 111., about the 28th of November, 1904, taking his family to the Indian Territory, where he left them with his father, going to seek work elsewhere. Upon leaving home he securely locked and fastened his house. On the 10th of December thereafter it appears that the house was broken open and a piano belonging to appellee taken therefrom; that the party breaking the house entered the same through a window in the kitchen, and with the aid of other persons, after breaking the fastenings on the front door, removed the piano therefrom; that upon leaving the house he pulled the door to without locking or fastening it, and likewise left the window through which he had entered unfastened. The evidence further shows that the party who broke the house and removed the piano was one Carlyle, then the local agent of appellant. It further appears that this piano was removed by the instruction of the president of said company, and also at the instance of one Kobinson, • its general manager for the State of Illinois. Appellee having heard that his house had been broken and the piano taken therefrom, returned to his home, going by way of St. Louis, where he stopped over and saw the president of the company at its office in said city, at which time he found the piano in appellant’s warehouse, and had a conversation with the president in which he admitted that, through some mistake in a telephone communication from Baldwin & Co., another piano firm, but in no way connected with appellant, he had directed his said agent, Carlyle, to take the piano and keep it. This piano was afterwards shipped to appellant’s St. Louis house, where it was overhauled and put in good condition, but was identified by appellee upon this visit. After this interview with the president appellee went to his home at Murphj’sboro, where he found that his house had been broken and left open, and missed the property described in his petition and made search therefor, but was unable to find any of the missing articles. In April thereafter his piano was shipped to him at Sherman, Texas, by Baldwin & Company, to whom the same had been sent by appellant.

Appellant’s first, second and third assignments of error are addressed to the alleged insufficiency of the petition, upon the ground that some of the articles lost were insufficiently described, and that the petition did not give the separate value of said articles, but only their aggregate value.

The third paragraph of the petition alleges that said cooking vessels consisted of granite-ware articles as follows: one dishpan, one teakettle, one teapot, and the other articles were one axe and one hatchet of the aggregate value of $6. The fourth paragraph of the petition alleges the loss of the wearing apparel of plaintiff’s wife, naming the articles, but only gave their aggregate value. The seventh paragraph alleged the loss of certain miscellaneous books, consisting of 35 volumes of household library books, of the value of $30, and alleged that the plaintiff is unable to enumerate same and to give a more particular description thereof.

We think in this class of cases that the petition was sufficiently *388 definite in its description of the property lost, and that it was not necessary to give the value of each article separately, but that the value might be properly stated in the aggregate. In Schneider Davis v. Ferguson, 77 Texas, 575, Judge Gaines says: “It may frequently occur that a plaintiff whose goods have been unlawfully seized may be unable to specifically describe each article so taken. Under such circumstances it would be unreasonable to require a particular description. Such a rule in such.cases would result in a practical denial of justice.”

Mr. Townes on Pleading, p. 282, says: “Quantity is not ordinarily required to be stated with exactness,” and so with reference to “allegations of value. . . . There was an old rule that if suit was

brought for a number of separate articles or things, and only an aggregate value was given, and the proof showed a different number, there could be no apportionment of the alleged value and pro rata recovery, but this seems to be no longer the case.”

In the 21st Encyclopedia of Pleading & Practice^ p. 821, treating of this subject, it is said: “Where the subject matter of the trespass is personal property, its quantity, quality and value, or price, should be stated. However, an allegation as to quantity and quality in general terms is sufficient; and where many articles are removed or injured it is sufficient to state the aggregate value of all of them.”

In Donaghe v. Roudeboush, 4 Munf. (Va.), 251, in declaring for the taking away of a quantity of poultry, consisting of turkeys, geese, ducks and hens, it was held that it was unnecessary to state how many there were of each description, the collective value of the whole being stated.

Even in criminal pleading, where greater accuracy is demanded than in civil, it is not required to state the separate value of each article of property taken or stolen, but if the items are given the aggregate value of all may be alleged. Thompson v. State, 43 Texas, 268; Ware v. State, 2 Texas Crim. App., 547. Believing there is no merit in these assignments, they are overruled.

By its fourth assignment of error appellant complains that the court erred in overruling its exception to the petition, because the injury complained of is not the direct and proximate cause of the loss of the goods charged to have been taken, in that it was not stated that the goods, other than the piano, were taken by appellant or its agent, but that it appeared that the same were lost to the plaintiff as a result of said trespass and leaving the house unfastened. By its thirteenth assignment of error appellant complains of the action of the court in refusing to give its special charge to the effect that, though the jury should believe that the defendant, by its employes, did enter the premises of appellee and take therefrom his piano, and left the house open or insecurely fastened, and that afterwards other persons entered said premises and removed therefrom goods belonging to appellee, that he would not be entitled to recover therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 225, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 385, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jesse-french-piano-organ-co-v-phelps-texapp-1907.