Parker v. Keyser

540 S.W.2d 827, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 1976
Docket1095
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 540 S.W.2d 827 (Parker v. Keyser) 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
Parker v. Keyser, 540 S.W.2d 827, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3112 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

NYE, Chief Justice.

This is a conversion case. The plaintiffs, Harold R. Keyser and wife, Doris L. Key-ser, brought suit against defendants, Ordrey Parker and Peggy A. Parsley, for actual and exemplary damages resulting from the alleged damage, destruction and conversion of certain personal property belonging to the plaintiffs. Trial of the case was before a jury which was submitted on special issues. The jury found that “Ordrey Parker and/or Peggy Parsley” wrongfully removed, damaged or destroyed property belonging to plaintiffs, which property had a fair market value of $3,167.76. The jury also found that the defendants acted with malice in removing plaintiffs’ property, and awarded plaintiffs exemplary damages in the sum of $2,000.00 against Ordrey Parker and/or Peggy A. Parsley. The trial court entered judgment for plaintiffs and against the defendants jointly in the total sum of $5,167.76. From that judgment both defendants have duly perfected this appeal to this Court.

On or about July 13, 1970, the plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Keyser, entered into a real estate purchase contract with Robert Parsley and wife, Peggy A. Parsley, to purchase a home located in Portland, Texas. Mrs. Parsley’s mother, Mrs. Ordrey Parker, was a part-time realtor and acted as the sales agent in the transaction. The Keysers resided in Providence, Rhode Island at that time and upon the execution of the purchase contract returned to Rhode Island to close their business and prepare for their move to Portland, Texas. The purchase contract provided that the closing was to take place on or before August 15, 1970.

On August 3, 1970, Hurricane Celia struck the Texas Coast causing extensive property damage in and around Portland, Texas, including extensive damage to the property which was subject to the contract of purchase between the parties. Mrs. Parker notified Mr. Keyser by telephone in Rhode Island that the house was damaged to the extent that it was not liveable. Mr. Keyser told Mrs. Parker they would be arriving in Portland in approximately a week to view the damage.

Immediately after the hurricane, Mrs. Parker obtained a house trailer from HUD (a government agency) in her daughter’s (Mrs. Parsley’s) name and had it placed at the rear of a house on Polaris Street which belonged to Mrs. Parker. Her daughter, however, did not move into the trailer at that time, but remained at the Seashell Inn where living accommodations were furnished as part of her compensation as manager.

The Keysers arrived in Portland on Labor Day in September of 1970 after the hurricane had struck. They stayed that night with some friends and met with Mrs. Parker the next day so as to determine if the necessary arrangements had been made by Mrs. Parker to complete the sale of the house. Because the house was not liveable, the Keysers found themselves without a place to stay until the house could be repaired. Mrs. Parker offered the Keysers the use of the HUD trailer, it being disputed whether the use was only for a short period of time or until the house they were purchasing was repaired and made liveable. The Keysers accepted and moved their belongings into the trailer and resided there approximately seven (7) weeks. During this time, the sale was completed and the deal closed on October 2, 1970, even though the house was still not completely repaired.

Sometime around mid-October, Mrs. Parker sent her husband to the HUD trailer where the Keysers were staying, with a note stating that they (Mrs. Parker and *829 Mrs. Parsley) were ready for their trailer and were ready to move back into it. Because the house they were purchasing was still not available, and because Mr. Keyser was unable to find other housing for his family, they chose to continue to stay in the trailer. The need for the trailer by Mrs. Parker and Mrs. Parsley was occasioned by Mr. Parker resigning as manager of the Seashell Inn resulting in the loss of the free accommodations and the further fact that their home was still in need of repair.

Although the evidence is conflicting, it appears that several days later the utilities to the trailer were cut off and the Keysers were forced to leave the trailer and spend the night with some friends. They took with them only the clothes they wore and some insulin that Mr. Keyser kept in the refrigerator in the trailer. The next day, Mrs. Keyser and her daughter returned to the trailer to pick up some clothing and found that everything was gone.

Mrs. Keyser then went to the police station in Portland and reported the incident. She was then referred to the Justice of the Peace, who contacted Mrs. Parker and was told that all of the Keysers’ property was stored in her garage. The Justice of the Peace told Mr. Keyser that before he went out there to pick up his property, he should ask a policeman to go with him so there would be no trouble. The jury could have found that only Ordrey Parker wrongfully removed the property. The jury could have found that both Parker and Parsley wrongfully removed the property. Yet, the trial court entered judgment against both Parker and Parsley. Mrs. Parker testified that she had not been at the trailer when the property was removed or stored in that she was ill. Mrs. Parsley stated that it was not she who removed the property, that it was a representative from HUD and the Red Cross who removed the property from the trailer and stored it in the Parker garage. There was other evidence that both removed the property.

Approximately a week later, Mr. and Mrs. Keyser went, along with a policeman, to the Polaris Street address to pick up their property. Upon regaining possession of their property, the Keysers made a list of the property allegedly missing, damaged or destroyed included within which was $2,272.81 in cash which Mr. Keyser had kept in a sock in his daughter’s chest of drawers. He also listed property which had been damaged or destroyed. The defendants denied any knowledge of the $2,272.81 missing cash as well as the other items allegedly missing.

On December 14, 1971, Mr. and Mrs. Keyser brought this suit against Mrs. Parker and Mrs. Parsley alleging that: defendants willfully broke into and entered the trailer and converted all of their personal property; and that upon regaining possession, the sum of $2,272.81 was missing as well as a quantity of clothing and other personal property which was either missing, damaged or destroyed.

The case was tried before a jury and in answer to certain special issues, the jury found: 1) that Ordrey Parker and/or Peggy Parsley wrongfully removed and damaged or destroyed property belonging to plaintiffs; 2) that the fair market value of the property so removed, damaged or destroyed was $3,167.76; 3) that in removing the property from the trailer, the defendants acted with malice; 4) and the sum of $2,000.00 should be awarded plaintiffs against Ordrey Parker and/or Peggy A. Parsley as exemplary damages.

The defendants made a motion for judgment alleging among other things that the jury’s answers to special issues 1, 2 and 5 would not support a judgment against Or-drey Parker or Peggy A. Parsley because the answers do not state which party was the actor and the issues are completely ambiguous. The motion was overruled. The trial court thereafter entered judgment for the plaintiffs and against the defendants Parker and Parsley in the sum of $5,167.76. Both defendants have perfected their appeal from that judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
540 S.W.2d 827, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-keyser-texapp-1976.