Patee v. McCabe-Bierman Wagon Co.

71 S.W. 374, 97 Mo. App. 356, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 241
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 23, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 71 S.W. 374 (Patee v. McCabe-Bierman Wagon Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patee v. McCabe-Bierman Wagon Co., 71 S.W. 374, 97 Mo. App. 356, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 241 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BARCLAY, J.

— Plaintiff sues defendant for the wrongful taking, detention and injuring his property, claiming $500 actual damages and $1,000 punitive or exemplary damages.

The substance of the petition is that defendant, March 6,1899, took and carried away certain goods and chattels of defendant, described as follows: One piano, one printing press and a lot of type and printing materials, two gasoline “Beacon burner” lamps, three trunks containing personal effects, one desk, chairs and other personal property of the value of six hundred dollars.

Plaintiff charges that defendant retained two lamps of the value of thirty dollars, injured the other property and put plaintiff to “considerable trouble” to recover the same.

The answer was a general denial.

The case was tried with the aid of a jury.

The facts as developed in evidence on behalf of plaintiff are that all the goods referred to in the petition were returned to plaintiff by defendant except two “Beacon burner” lamps. Defendant had a chattel mortgage upon a large wagon belonging to plaintiff to secure a loan which matured five or six months before the taking of these goods. The wagon was large and very heavy; about fourteen feet in length, six feet wide, with curtains drawn down on the sides and back, at the time of taking.

[358]*358Plaintiff had stored the wagon in a stable in the city of St. Louis in charge of a colored man. The stable was not at or near the residence of the plaintiff. It was simply a place which plaintiff had engaged for the storing of the wagon and contents. It appears that, about March 6, 1899, some of the officers of defendant came to the stable, effected an entrance and hauled the wagon away to the factory of defendant. When plaintiff discovered that fact, which he did March 6, 1899, he demanded the goods of defendant; whereupon they took them out of the wagon and returned them to the stable, everything except the two lamps. The value of' the lamps was given in evidence as $30.

According to plaintiff’s account the articles were-piled around promiscuously on their return and were-damaged, particularly the piano, desk, printing press, and type.

• The testimony of plaintiff tended further to show that the stable where the wagon had been placed by him. was closed and no one could get in except the colored man who had it in charge.

The plaintiff concedes that defendant liad the right' to take possession of the wagon when it was taken. Defendant on the other hand does not claim a lien on the-goods which were in the wagon.

Plaintiff, complains that he was obliged to expend considerable time going about to discover' where the-goods were, after they had been taken by the defendant.

During the examination of plaintiff, the court ruled that it was not permissible for defendant under the-pleadings to justify the taking of the goods on tiie ground that it had the right to take the wagon in which they were stored, or to show that they were taken by mistake, even in mitigation of damages, for want of' any pleas to that effect.

The court limited the inquiry to the question of" whether the defendant took the property, but after-wards ruled that defendant would be permitted to show the circumstances in which the property was taken, “as. [359]*359bearing on the question of punitive damages only, not as to the right to take the property in the wagon.”

The plaintiff gave evidence tending to prove that the property was returned to him in a damaged condition.

The colored man who had charge of the stable where the wagon was stored testified on behalf of plaintiff that the premises (which had formerly been a livery stable kept by Mr. Chilton) had been given into his care by the agent of the property after Mr. Chilton left and that in consideration of his looking after them he was allowed to keep his own wagon and horse therein. The wagon in question was in the stable when Mr. Chilton left it, and remained until the occurrences which gave rise to this action.

. According to this witness, the front door of the stable was nailed up and there was “a chain on the back door” (the meaning of which is left to inference). The stable, however, could be entered through a large open window in the rear, and the wagon could not be taken out without breaking open the front door, which had been nailed up.

The same witness testified that the wagon and the goods therein were “all right” a day or two before they were taken; but when they were returned to the stable, a few days later, some of the goods were broken and badly injured.

On defendant’s side there was evidence tending to prove that the goods which were taken away in the wagon were returned in good order to the same place as soon as the defendant learned the whereabouts of plaintiff; that defendant had been unable after diligent inquiry for two or three days to find plaintiff before taking the wagon, and that, when the place of storage of the wagon was discovered, no one was found in charge of the wagon, the goods or the stable. One of defendant’s officers, after finding the wagon in the stable, testified that he went to a number of places where plaintiff had formerly boarded; heard nothing of him, so he had two persons meet witness early one morning [360]*360at the stable and they pushed open the sliding front door wheeled the wagon out, hitched it behind another wagon and took it to defendant’s factory.

Three days later witness received a telephone message from plaintiff asking if he had taken plaintiff’s wagon, to which witness replied that they had it at the factory. Plaintiff then said: “You have maliciously taken my goods,” and witness rejoined, “No, that is not true; we have taken your wagon. ” Witness then believed they had taken the wagon only, as the curtains were down and nobody had looked into the wagon; that the boards of the wagon were seven feet above the ground, and he had never thought of looking into the wagon. Next day after an interview with plaintiff this witness discovered the goods, announced that they had been taken by mistake, but that he place where they were was not safe and he would do with them as plaintiff might direct. Plaintiff refused to say where he wanted the goods delivered. Witness told him then that they would be sent to the same place unless they got other directions. Plaintiff left witness, and witness immediately engaged the services of the Boll-man Bros. Piano Company, which returned the goods to their former place of storage, in good order. Witness testified that all the goods taken were returned and in the same condition; and that the stable was a very unsafe place for storage, as any person could get in ¿t any time as he did.

Other testimony for defendant was given tending to corroborate the material points of the evidence just outlined. .

Plaintiff admitted that under the chattel mortgage held by defendant, defendant had the right to take the wagon.

The court, against the objection of defendant, permitted plaintiff as a witness to testify that he had employed a person to help him (plaintiff) search for the property.

Plaintiff was further permitted to show that the value of his own time was “about $25 a day” and that [361]*361it took him four days to get the property back into his possession after defendant had taken it.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 374, 97 Mo. App. 356, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patee-v-mccabe-bierman-wagon-co-moctapp-1902.