Statler Hotels v. Herbert Rosenthal Jewelry Corp.

351 S.W.2d 579, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2728
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 1961
Docket15870
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 351 S.W.2d 579 (Statler Hotels v. Herbert Rosenthal Jewelry Corp.) 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
Statler Hotels v. Herbert Rosenthal Jewelry Corp., 351 S.W.2d 579, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2728 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

Herbert Rosenthal, representing appellee corporation of New York City, made one of his regular trips to Texas in November 1956 for purpose of soliciting retail jewelry orders for his wholesale jewelry firm. He arrived in Dallas the afternoon of November 21st, registering at appellant hotel as a paying guest. Then with his sample case containing some 342 pieces of diamond jewelry he called on several local establishments, returning to the hotel about 5 p. m. and obtained from hotel cashier safety deposit vault #357, depositing therein his sample case of jewelry. The box had two locks one opened by a key retained by the hotel guest, the other a master key in possession of the hotel. On November 23rd, he went to the cashier’s cage, showed his safety deposit key and asked for entry into Box #357; being admitted to the safety deposit box room by a different cashier. On opening the box by use of both keys it was found to be empty. This suit followed, plaintiff alleging that defendant’s negligence resulted in loss or theft of its property; and upon jury issues and answers, judgment was rendered for the jewelry company in amount of $65,000 with 6% interest from date of loss, and consequent appeal by the hotel. There was no recovery against named individuals also sued.

*581 Appellant’s first point complains of court error in overruling its motion to dismiss cause “because the undisputed evidence shows that appellee was a foreign corporation transacting business in Texas without a certificate of authority” as required by Art. 8.18, Texas Business Corporation Act, V.A.T.S.; which provides in part: “No foreign corporation which is transacting, or has transacted, business in this State without a certificate of authority shall be permitted to maintain any action, suit, or proceeding in any court of this State * * * on any cause. of action arising out of the transaction of business in this State, until such corporation shall have obtained a certificate of authority.”

Appellee is a foreign corporation which manufactures and sells at wholesale; having no certificate of authority to transact business in Texas. Its method of operation in this State is reflected in testimony of Herbert Rosenthal, Secretary-Treasurer, as adduced in the motion, summarized as follows: Plaintiff’s sales in Texas are made by a salesman Zuehl, living in El Paso, who makes all the small towns in Texas and New Mexico, and by Herbert Rosenthal, who sells in the larger cities. The latter with headquarters in New York City makes some five trips per year to Dallas and Houston to sell jewelry; estimating that he had been in Dallas at least fifty times in the ten years prior to November 19S6. His routine of work is not only to take orders for jewelry later to be shipped from New York; he also carries merchandise with him in a sample case, and upon a sale of jewelry he immediately delivers the piece to the buyer. He may leave the jewelry with customer on appraisal or subject to the buyers’ being able to sell it; and in case the buyer decides that he does not want the j ewelry or is unable to sell it, it is picked up by Rosenthal on next trip. All payments for jewelry are made directly to the corporation’s office in New York City; the El Paso salesman Zuehl operating in the same manner, maintaining no business office there for plaintiff corporation and representing numerous other jewelry concerns.

The Texas Business Corporation Act (Art. 8.18, passed in 1955) does not undertake to define “transacting business”, except to list several activities (none applicable here) which do not amount to the transaction of business'. See Art. 8.01. Appellant argues that under above undisputed facts appellee’s activities constituted the transaction of business; citing Normandie Oil Corporation v. Oil Trading Co. Inc.; 139 Tex. 402, 163 S.W.2d 179, 180—a 1942 decision construing the former statute, A-rt. 1529 covering corporations “desiring to transact or solicit business in Texas, or to establish a general or special office in this State.” The Business Corporation Act does not mention solicitation; merely prohibiting the transaction of local business without a certificate of authority, Art. 8.01, subd. A, but generally providing that transactions in interstate commerce are beyond the scope of local business activities. Art. 8.01, subd. B. 14 Tex.Jur.2d Par. 618, p. 709. Ap-pellee takes the opposite view, citing 14 Tex.Jur.2d Par. 706, 710 and 711; and obviously the character of business as intrastate or interstate must turn upon the facts of the particular case. While we fire inclined to agree with appellee’s thesis that its activities in Texas are interstate in nature, such method of operation is not controlling here. At time of the theft, Rosen-thal had transported the jewelry in question from New York City intervening a further journey to Washington, Oregon and California. Under the testimony and as ap-pellee states “He did not have or attempt to have any jewelry transactions with Stabler Hotels and only as an incident to his lodging there had entrusted the hotel with the safe-keeping of his jewelry until he could transport it out of the State. His deposit of the jewelry did not arise out of the transacting of business within the State, even if his dealings are considered to be intrastate transactions, which they are not.” The point is overruled.

*582 In sum, the jury findings were: that the sample case of jewelry owned by plaintiff was deposited in vault #357 Statler Hotel on November 21, 1956; that on such date the reasonable wholesale cash market value of same in Dallas County was $65,000; that the failure of defendant hotel to deliver to Rosenthal on demand the sample case of jewelry was due to negligence of hotel employees which was a proximate cause of the loss; that defendant, its agents and employees failed to maintain adequate safety measures for protection of the sample case and its contents, which was a proximate cause of loss; that defendant, its agents and employees allowed a master key controlling access to locked boxes to be unguarded, which was negligence and a proximate cause of loss; that at the time, defendant’s agents and servants allowed an unauthorized person access to said safety vault # 357 without first requiring proper identification, which was negligence and proximate cause of loss of sample case and its contents and that the incident in question was not the result of an unavoidable accident. To the merits, the hotel company defended on ground that it had adequate measures for protection of its safety deposit boxes and that the loss was due to a theft so well planned that exercise of ■ordinary care could not have avoided it.

Appellant makes no complaint of lack of evidence to support above findings; its further points asserting court error in its refusal to make findings of fact and conclusions of law following the overruling of motion to dismiss under provisions of Art.

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Bluebook (online)
351 S.W.2d 579, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/statler-hotels-v-herbert-rosenthal-jewelry-corp-texapp-1961.