Roberts v. Lewis

1968 OK 38, 441 P.2d 350
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 26, 1968
Docket41815
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1968 OK 38 (Roberts v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Lewis, 1968 OK 38, 441 P.2d 350 (Okla. 1968).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

In May, 1964, plaintiff, a motel maid, was the tenant occupying apartment No. 1, in an apartment building owned by the defendant (Mrs.) Bessie Lewis on Oklahoma City’s east side. The defendant, Red Ingram, Mrs. Lewis’s employee, helped operate the building. His duties included renting the apartments, and collecting their rentals. He rented plaintiff’s apartment to her for at least the last part of that month. On June 2nd, plaintiff left her two young daughters with her husband’s cousin, Evelyn Vick, who occupied apartment No. 2, across the hall from plaintiff’s apartment, and journeyed to Texas to see her husband, who was an inmate in a penitentiary there. When plaintiff returned to Oklahoma City the second week in June, the family’s clothes, and other personal effects, had been removed from the apartment, and it had been rented to a new tenant.

Thereafter, plaintiff instituted the present action for damages on account of what appears to be the alleged conversion of a list of items of personal property (including some watches), which she claimed were removed from the apartment during her absence by the defendant. Ingram, without her knowledge, and under the direction of the other two defendants. In her second amended petition, plaintiff plead that the property had a total value of $4626.73, and that defendants’ taking of it was willful and deliberate. She prayed for actual damages in the amount of the property’s said value, and the additional sum of $4,-000.00 in exemplary damages.

After the filing of pleadings on behalf of defendants alleging facts, which, if proven, were calculated to exonerate them from liability to plaintiff, the cause came on for trial before a jury.

At the trial, there was a conflict between the testimony of plaintiff, and that of Red Ingram, as to whether plaintiff rented the apartment on May 1st, and paid him a full month’s rent of $54.00, or whether she initially rented it on May 15th, and paid him $13.50 per week for the last two weeks in that month; but, in any event, it was agreed that plaintiff’s rent on the apartment was paid up to, or through, June 1st. Further testimony by plaintiff, corroborated in some respects by her witness, Avery Hill (who was her cousin, and who lived in another part of Oklahoma City) was to the effect that, after cashing the public welfare check she received on June 1st, and waiting, in vain, all that day for Ingram to come to her apartment and collect her rent, plaintiff, before leaving the next day on the Texas trip, gave $55.00 of the proceeds of that check to Avery Hill, with instructions to use $54.00 of it in paying her June rent, if she was contacted for it. Avery Hill testified, without contradiction, that no one ever contacted her for the rent money, and that she returned it to plaintiff, after the latter’s return from Texas. Plaintiff testified, in substance, that the first time she encountered Ingram, after her return from Texas, she requested the return of her belongings, but he refused to give them to her until she paid him some rent, and she then told him she didn’t feel like she owed any, since he had taken “everything I had”. She also testified that on the same occasion she represented to him that she had left the June rent money *352 with her cousin before taking the Texas trip.

The undisputed evidence was that before plaintiff left for Texas, she had no key to the apartment; and Evelyn Vick testified, as a witness for plaintiff, that there was no way to lock plaintiff’s apartment “on the inside”, but that plaintiff had a knife stuck in the front door, and when Ingram, and a boy named “Edgar”, who helped him, entered the apartment to move plaintiff’s “stuff” out, “they busted it down and went into the back door and opened the front door.” This witness further testified that in a conversation she had with Red Ingram about the time plaintiff left for Texas, she told him plaintiff had left the rent money with her cousin, and that the witness gave him the cousin’s name and address and told him “he could go pick it up or wait until she came back * * *

During plaintiff’s testimony concerning the list of articles she claimed was in her apartment when Ingram entered it during her absence, she set forth the value she had arrived at for certain men’s suits; and counsel for the defendants objected, on the ground that she didn’t own the suits and couldn’t “sue for them”. The court overruled the objection, telling defense counsel he could inquire into the matter on cross examination. Later, when said counsel interrogated plaintiff on cross examination about the men’s suits, she testified that they were hers, and that her husband “left them with her”. Later, in her cross examination, when plaintiff revealed the amounts of her two public welfare checks, the court sustained plaintiff counsel’s objection to defense counsel asking plaintiff if her husband was the father of her children; but immediately thereafter, upon receiving the court’s permission to make an “observation”, defense counsel stated: “If these are her children, then her husband is responsible for taking care of them and she shouldn’t be on this welfare board. That’s the law.” As far as the record shows, this statement was made in the presence and hearing of members of the jury, and without any admonition for them to disregard it.

Later, during plaintiff’s cross examination, defense counsel introduced a group of articles as defendants’ Exhibit 1, and interrogated plaintiff about them. She identified part of them as belongings that were taken from her apartment, but denied that other articles of the group were hers. Those, which she identified as belonging to her, were tendered back to her by defense counsel; and her counsel announced acceptance of their tender “in mitigation of damages”. In the colloquy that followed between plaintiff and defense counsel, the latter told her (apparently in the hearing and presence of the jury) : “Well, there is no damages. You can just get that out of your system. We are just trying to give your stuff back, * * * ”. After plaintiff was persuaded to say that she would accept return of the articles she had identified as hers, defense counsel further stated to her, in the presence of the jury: “All right, here it is, it’s yours. So we will get that out of the case.”

After plaintiff had testified that her husband was then out of the penitentiary, this part of plaintiff’s cross examination ended with defense counsel asking plaintiff when her husband was coming back; and when the witness answered that “He’ll be here next week end”, defense counsel stated to plaintiff, in the presence of the jury: “As a matter of fact he is slipping in out there and living with you now and he knows if he comes back and lives with you you will be taken off of the welfare.” After plaintiff’s counsel interposed an objection, defense counsel stated, in the presence of the jury: “Well, it is a statement of fact” — despite the witness’s denial, just before that, that she was then receiving any public welfare benefits. The court sustained plaintiff counsel’s objection, but did not admonish the jury to disregard defense counsel’s quoted statements.

*353 Later in plaintiff’s cross examination, defense counsel asked her if she “put up the money to file this law suit”, and plaintiff answered in the negative.

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Bluebook (online)
1968 OK 38, 441 P.2d 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-lewis-okla-1968.