Rosenfield v. White

267 S.W.2d 596, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 1954
Docket14672
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 267 S.W.2d 596 (Rosenfield v. White) 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
Rosenfield v. White, 267 S.W.2d 596, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2505 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

On rehearing, our opinion heretofore filed is withdrawn and set aside; substituting in lieu thereof the following as the original opinion in this case:

The suit in trial court was for conversion of personal property, described generally by appellee (plaintiff) as serviceable secondhand paving equipment; by defendants (appellants), on the other hand, as of merely junk value and “bad junk” at that. Following a jury trial, submission of some 69 issues, and answers thereto, judgment was rendered for plaintiff White and against Benjamin, Israel, and Phillip Rosenfield, copartners under the trade name of Liberty Iron & Metal Company, jointly and severally for $7,150 with 6% interest from July 18, 1952, date of rendition, followed by this appeal. The items in question, nine in number, were owned by plaintiff on or about February 3, 1948, according to the jury, when defendants took possession thereof at Dallas, Texas, and converted same to-their own use.- The claim was for the market value thereof at said time and place or, in the alternative, for;their actual or intrinsic value “to the plaintiff.” The articles so. allegedly converted are here set forth together with the jury findings of values, both market and intrinsic: (1) Gas Paver, market $750, intrinsic $1,500; (2) .Best Tractor, market $700, intrinsic $800; (3) Erie Steam Shovel, market $1,000, intrinsic $1,000; (4) Littleford Asphalt Kettle, market $150, intrinsic $200; (5) asphalt mixing plant, market $1,000, intrinsic $1,250; (6) 20-ton Low Boy Trailer, market $400, intrinsic $500; (7) 16,000-gallon steel tank, market $600, intrinsic $900; (8) clam shell bucket, market $500, intrinsic $500; (9) ½ cubic yard dragline bucket, market $275, intrinsic $500.

Facts leading up to the instant controversy are these: Long prior hereto plaintiff White, a resident of San Antonio, had been engaged in the street paving business with operations extending to several Texas cities. In 1928 he had purchased the equipment along with unfinished municipal contracts of Smith Bros., Dallas, completing these contracts- in 1932 or ’33; and, with no further work in prospect on account of business conditions, he had stored the equipment in question on an Alamo Street *598 lot, Dallas; with evidence of - due precautions taken for care and safekeeping inclusive of a watchman. There the property remained (certain of the machinery being made use of on city streets for repairs and patch work up to 1937) until February 19, 1948. Defendants’ conversion through individuals designated as Weeks and Johnson, not parties to this suit, is alleged to have occurred around above date; the property being purchased by the Rosenfields from Weeks on basis of scrap iron or junk in two transactions for the sum of $700. Aside from the issue of conversion, involved in defendants’ method of acquisition and possession of the articles in dispute, this extensive record and briefs of the parties deal almost entirely with value of these articles and the legal measure by which such value may be properly determined.

' In the same connection plaintiff’s witness Hughes testified to a cash market value of the property on February 3,- 1948, giving amounts item by item and totaling $8,350; one' O’Neal testifying to a bulk cash market valuation of between twelve and thirteen thousand dollars; the testimony of plaintiff White on the same subject, over objections, being as follows:

“Q. Mr. White, to make it as plain set-up as possible, take each item and give us what you say is the actual or intrinsic value to you. A. The Koering mixer I say is $2,500.
“Q. Speak out louder so the jury can hear you. A. The Koering mixer, I say, is $2,500; the Best tractor $500. *■ * *
“Q. Go ahead with the next item. A. Erie Steam Shovel.'
■ “Q. You have not told us about the Best Tractor. A. I think I did. I will say it again.- The Best tractor, I say, was worth $500. The Erie steam shovel, I say, worth $5,000. The Little-ford Asphalt Kettle, $1,000. The'Dou.ble Drum Blake Mixing Plant, complete, I say is worth $1,000. 1 20-ton Low Boy Trailer, I say is worth $750. One 16,000.' gallon steel tank,- 3/16", I say is worth $2,000.. 6,000 gallons fluxing oil I say is worth ten cents a gallon, or $600. One 1/2" cubic yard clam shell bucket I say is worth $500. One cubic yard dragline bucket I say $500. 700 lineal feet of 600 pound rail at $40 per ton would be $280, which I say is its value, making a grand total of $14,-630,.on the outfit.” (The items of 6,000 gallons fluxing oil and 700 lineal feet of railroad iron were disposed of by the jury adversely to plaintiff.)

In direct conflict with the foregoing valuations, testimony of numerous witnesses on behalf of defendants was to effect that the property in fact was of no more than junk or scrap iron value, definitely estimated at. from $13 to $17 per ton.

As already stated, plaintiff sought recovery on basis of cash or market value or, in the alternative, of actual or intrinsic value to him. Reasonable cash market value was defined in the court’s charge as “the amount of money that one desiring to sell, but not bound to do so, could within a reasonable time procure in cash for such property from one who desired to buy, but was not bound to purchase the property.” The actual value or intrinsic value was defined as “the real worth, in money, if any, of the property to the ozvner for the purpose for which such property was used or was capable of being’ used in the future by the owner at the time and place inquired about.” (Emphasis ours.) Issue No. 1 related to one Koering 21-E Gas Paver, No. 10,813; and preliminary to all issues concerning values of the • articles sued for was the following form of ‘ question: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that on or about Feb- : ruary 3, 1948 the property described * * * had a cash market value in Dallas, Texas?”. And, “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that on or about February 3, 1948 the property described * * * had an actual or intrinsic value, as that term is defined herein?” And further relating to all issues on actual values, the following instruction, requested by defendants, was by the court refused: ' “By the term ‘actual or intrinsic value’ as used in this charge, is meant the *599 usual selling price at the place where the property is located at the time its value is to be ascertained, which would be offered by a willing purchaser to a willing seller in its condition then existing.”

Since compensation to the injured party is as a general rule the judicial objective in award of damages, it is ordinarily held in an action for loss of or injury to personal property that the market value of the property is the proper meas- ' ure of .damage; the theory being that the injured party is made whole if he is given •money with which he can buy equivalent property in the market place; Sarkesian v. Cedric Chase Photographic Lab., 324 Mass. 620, 87 N.E.2d 745, 12 A.L.R.2d 902; above rule being more specifically stated in International-Great Northern R. Co. v. Casey, Tex.Com.App., 46 S.W.2d 669

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W.2d 596, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenfield-v-white-texapp-1954.