North American Van Lines, Inc. v. Bernard Heller

371 F.2d 629, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7775
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 1967
Docket23477_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 371 F.2d 629 (North American Van Lines, Inc. v. Bernard Heller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North American Van Lines, Inc. v. Bernard Heller, 371 F.2d 629, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7775 (5th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Chief Judge:

This appeal challenges the granting of a judgment for the value of household furnishings in favor of the appellee as one of the defendants in an interpleader action, following a decision by the trial court that the North American Van Lines, Inc., had converted the appellee’s household furnishings by removing them and failing to heed his demand for their return. The furniture had been removed upon the request of the wife of the appel-lee, who was, at the time in question, living separately from him.

There is no serious issue as to the facts in the case. In January of 1962, Mr. Bernard Heller and his wife, who were living in a residential section of Shreveport, Louisiana, decided to separate. He went to live with his mother, and Mrs. Heller with the three minor children, retained their residence in the *631 family home on Symphony Lane. There was no agreement of separation, and no order of separation in effect at any of the times that are critical to this decision. In July of 1962, Mrs. Heller and the children left town ostensibly to visit her mother in Texas. While on this trip, she went, without the knowledge of Mr. Heller, to Reno, Nevada, to file a suit for divorce. On July 24th, while in Reno, Mrs. Heller called on the local representative of North American Van Lines, one N. Devine, and his wife, Mrs. W. E. Devine. In their presence, and on their letterheads, she wrote a letter addressed to North American Van Lines, A. D. Dunn, Transfer and Storage, appellant’s representative, in Shreveport, Louisiana, directing that all of the furniture and personal belongings in the Symphony Lane residence be forwarded to Oakland, California and placed in storage there. This letter was enclosed in a communication written by the Devines, who repeated the request, and enclosed to Dunn in Shreveport a key to the house. The household goods were to be shipped C.O.D. in care of the Nevil Storage Company in Oakland, California, to be called for at Mrs. Heller’s pleasure. The letter requested urgent and prompt shipment of the goods.

Upon receipt of this letter, Mr. Gilbert, the manager of Dunn Transfer in Shreveport, visited the house and made an estimate of the amount of goods to be shipped and, on or about July 27th, phoned the district dispatcher in Joplin, Missouri, requesting that a truck of sufficient size be dispatched to Shreveport. On August 2, 1962, the truck arrived in Shreveport. On August 3rd, all of the household contents were loaded into the truck after necessary packing had been completed. Everything was removed from the house except wall-to-wall carpets, in accordance with Mrs. Heller’s instructions. On Friday, August 4th, a neighbor commented to Mr. Heller about the vacant appearance of his house, whereupon he went by and found the condition of the place. This was the first knowledge he had that any local mover had received any instructions from his wife or that anything had interrupted Mrs. Heller’s tenancy at Symphony Lane. He customarily checked the house, every few days, while his wife was away and had been there three or four days earlier and had found everything in the usual condition including the presence of bicycles and other personal items in the carport.

When he found everything gone, shortly after noon on Friday, August 4th, he had every local transfer company called and ascertained in a couple of hours that Dunn Transfer had made the movement. Mr. Gilbert told Mr. Heller of the letter of authority from his wife, but Mr. Heller immediately protested the shipment, and inquired as to what representative of American Van he should get in touch with to get the furniture back. He was told to get in touch with a Mr. Helstrom, the claims agent of the company at the home office in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. Gilbert, however, immediately called a Mr. Bradford, who was the district dispatcher of the appellant company, in Joplin, Missouri and told him of the call from Heller. Helstrom suggested to Heller that he should get in touch with Mr. Bradford, the dispatcher in Joplin. He immediately called Mr. Bradford, who indicated that he already knew about the situation, since he had heard from Gilbert. Heller testified that originally during this conversation, Mr. Bradford seemed cooperative and said that he had been in touch with the driver, who lived in Dallas, and that he would attempt to locate the driver in Dallas and try to delay the shipment. Heller thought that he should have a record of the protest and he sent a night letter to the company’s main office at Fort Wayne, Indiana, repeating his protest. 1

*632 The records of the company show that the van left Dallas at eight P.M. on Friday, August 3rd. On Saturday morning, Mr. Heller again called Mr. Bradford, who said that he was sorry but that he could not or would not do anything about delaying the truck, without a court order. In the meantime, on the same Saturday morning, counsel for Mr. Heller sought to obtain a sequestration order in the Louisiana court, but this was denied because the goods had already left the state of Louisiana.

The van continued its course to Oakland, California where, based upon the information it had received from Mr. Heller, appellant ordered it held until further notice from the home office. Mrs. Heller made no demand for the goods and they remained in storage at a cost of $60.00 per month, until after the date of trial. So far as we are aware, the goods are still there. Mrs. Heller subsequently got her divorce in Nevada, and Mr. Heller subsequently got a separation judgment in the Louisiana courts. After considerable legal skirmishing, the appellants filed this inter-pleader action against Mr. and Mrs. Heller, and Heller filed a counter-claim seeking damages for the alleged conversion of his property. Mrs. Heller did not file any defensive pleadings, and a default judgment was taken against her by Heller and by North American so that it has been legally established that Heller was entitled to possession of the goods at the time they were taken by American Van Lines, so far as the status of the goods might otherwise have been affected by the Louisiana community property laws. 2

The fact is, as found by the trial court, that at the moment the American Van Lines took the household goods from the home of the Hellers in Shreveport, they took it without authority, for the wife had no right to authorize the taking. However, Mr. Heller’s right of recovery here does not depend upon his establishing the original taking on the purported authorization of the wife as a conversion entitling him to damages for the value of the property. His contention is based upon the fact that a conversion occurred when, after appellant was notified that it had no right to take the property, it refused either to return it or to delay shipment at a place convenient for a later return pending the making of an investigation, which, would have demonstrated that the taking had been illegal and unwarranted and for proceeding to run up approximately $2,000.00 in transportation costs by carrying it halfway across the continent and then demanding charges for bringing it back to Shreveport as a condition to surrendering it to the rightful owner.

We need not consider what would have been Mr. Heller’s rights if American Van Lines, Inc., had held the goods in storage in Dallas, and, upon satisfying itself that Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. United States
471 F. Supp. 1186 (E.D. California, 1979)
United States v. Sea-Land Service, Inc.
424 F. Supp. 1008 (D. New Jersey, 1977)
Clock v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas R. Co.
407 F. Supp. 448 (E.D. Missouri, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 F.2d 629, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-american-van-lines-inc-v-bernard-heller-ca5-1967.