Rogers Et Ux. v. O.K. Bus Baggage Co.

1915 OK 245, 148 P. 837, 149 P. 839, 46 Okla. 289, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1158
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 4, 1915
Docket4354
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1915 OK 245 (Rogers Et Ux. v. O.K. Bus Baggage Co.) 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
Rogers Et Ux. v. O.K. Bus Baggage Co., 1915 OK 245, 148 P. 837, 149 P. 839, 46 Okla. 289, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1158 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

ROBBERTS, C.

This case was originally brought in the county court of Coal county by the plaintiffs in error, also plaintiffs below, against the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, the O. K. Bus & Baggage Company, and D. M. Phillips, defendants. The petition alleges and the proof shows that the O. K. Bus & Baggage Company was simply a fictitious name, and that D. M. Phillips was the sale owner and proprietor of said company. During the progress of the case the cause of action was dismissed as to the railway company, and also as to the O. K. Bus Company, leaving D. M. Phillips the sole defendant.

Eor cause of action the' plaintiffs, among other facts, allege that:

“On or about the 4th day of October, 1901, plaintiff Sallie Rogers was on a passenger train en route from Chickasha to Lehigh, Oída.; that Lehigh is a station on a line of railway of the defendant the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, and in order to reach Lehigh it became necessary for plaintiff to pass through Oklahoma City; that on her journey from Chick-asha to Lehigh plaintiff had with her certain baggage, consisting of one large trunk, containing wearing apparel and jewelry; that as an incident to said journey it became necessary to have said trunk transferred from the depot of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company in Oklahoma City to the depot of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company; that plaintiff contracted with and employed defendant D. M. Phillips, as owner and proprietor of the O. K. Bus, Baggage & Carriage Company, to transfer said trunk from the depot of St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company to the depot of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, and deliver the same to the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company in a good condition, and for a valuable consideration the said D. M. Phillips, as owner and proprietor of the O. K. Bus, Baggage & Carriage Company, undertook and became bound and liable to safely transfer and deliver said trunk to the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company at its depot in Oklahoma City.
*291 “That these plaintiffs intended to leave Oklahoma City on their journey to Lehigh, and that plaintiff Joplin Eogers purchased for himself and plaintiff Sallie Eogers tickets over the Missouri, Kansas & Texas- Bailway Company from Oklahoma City to Lehigh, and paid therefor the usual fare; that plaintiffs requested the defendants to produce the baggage aforesaid, but said defendants failed to produce said baggage, and, though often requested to do so, still fails and refuses to deliver said baggage to plaintiffs, which said baggage was wholly lost by the negligence of the defendants. And plaintiffs further allege that they were the owners of the above-described baggage, and that they have received no pajunent for the same from the defendants.
“That at the time the said baggage was delivered to the defendant D. M. Phillips, he issued to plaintiffs a check or receipt for the same, which has become lost and cannot be found.
“That at the special instance and request of the defendant, plaintiffs made great effort and went to great expense to produce the delivery of said baggage, and in so doing expended certain sums of money and lost much time.
“Various items of damage suffered by plaintiffs by reason of the loss of such trunk and its contents, in addition to the value o said trunk and contents' thereof, which are more particularly shown in an itemized account hereto attached, marked Exhibit A, and made a part hereof, are as follows: Phone messages, 75 cents; fare to Oklahoma City and return on two trips, $16.60; loss of time, $10; and special damages by reason of the fact that said trunk contained' a large part of the 'wardrobe of plaintiff Sallie Eogers and her son, and that they were unable to immediately or for a long time to replace the same, and were at great expense and inconvenience in procuring clothing necessary and incident to their station in society, paying dressmakers5 bills, being deprived of the pleasure of society, the sum of $125. The value of said trunk, together with its contents, was the sum of $408, and the same has been wholly lost to the plaintiffs through the- negligence of the defendant, whereby plaintiffs have sustained great damages in the sum of $663.60.”

Eor answer the defendants file a general denial, unverified.

The case was tried to the court and jury. In support of their cause of action by plaintiffs, Mrs. Eogers testified, among *292 other things, as follows:

“Q. What is your name? A. Mrs. Joplin Rogers. Q. Where do you reside? A. Lehigh, Oída. Q. How long have you lived at Lehigh? A. 23 years. ' Q. Do you know D. M. Phillips ? A. I have met him. Q. Along about October, 1907, where were you living? A. At Lehigh. Q. Did yoa take a trip to Chickasha about that time? A. Yes, sir. Q. How Jong did you remain at Chickasha? A. Several weeks. Q. Do you remember when you left Chickasha for Oklahoma City? A. Some time in the month of October, 1907. Q. When you readied Oldahoma City did you employ the O. K. Bus & Baggage Company to transfer your trunk to the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Station. A. Before we arrived at Oklahoma City a gentleman came on the train, gave me a cheek for my trunk, and I paid him to transfer it. Q. Have you called for your trunk? A. Yes. Q. Have you made any effort to locate it? A. Yes, Q. Do you know what was in the trunk. A. I made a list of the articles. Q. You made a list of the articles contained in it? A. Yes. Q. Now, to refresh your memory, that list was introduced as evidence and marked Exhibit A, the list that you made —you made soon after the trunk was lost? A. Several days after I discovered the trunk was lost. Q. Can you remember the different articles you had in the trunk at the time it was lost ? A. Yes. Q. I believe you state that you made a list of the articles you had in the trunk, and that that list was filed in the trial of this suit two years ago. A. Yes, sir. Q. The list that you made and filed in the court at the trial before, also the exhibit in the petition, were copies of that list? A. Yes. Q. “Vira. Rogers, I will ask you to examine this and see if you know what it is. A. A list of articles contained in the trunk. Q. Have you the original list? A. No, sir; I left it in the court. O. What was the value of the trunk at that time? A. $12. Q. I will ask you to refresh your memory from this memorandum and name another article contained in the trunk at the time it was lost. A. One lady’s hat. Q. Do you remember the market value of that article at that time? A. Yes. Q;. What was the market value of the hat at that time in Oklahoma City? A. $15. Q. Mrs. Rogers, did you own the trunk that you delivered to the defendant herein for transportation some time in the month of October, 1907? A. Yes, sir. Q. Have you that trunk now? A. No, sir. Q. Mrs. Rogers, were you familiar *293 with the articles contained in the trunk that was lost? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you know who placed them in the trunk? A. Yes, sir; I placed them in the trunk. Q. Who bought the goods? A. I bought them. Q. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 245, 148 P. 837, 149 P. 839, 46 Okla. 289, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-et-ux-v-ok-bus-baggage-co-okla-1915.