Turnbull v. Automobile Service Co.

5 Pelt. 203
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1922
DocketNO. 8156
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Pelt. 203 (Turnbull v. Automobile Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turnbull v. Automobile Service Co., 5 Pelt. 203 (La. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Dinkelspiel; J,

Plaintiff sues the defendant company, alleging that they were indebted to him, first in the eum of $435.00, the value of one Ford Automobile, eeoond in the sum of $107.00, being for amount of repairs paid defendant and finally for the sum of $30.09 per month for the loas of the use of said maohlne from August 9th, 1917 until suoh time as he receives the said touring oar. Alleging further that defendants, «ho had for a consideration, full charge of the machine in question, whloh icxhongk through their neglect «as stolen from their premises, praying judgment for the amounts in question.

The defendant first filed an exception that the petition «as too vague and indefinite and that it disclosed no oause or right of aotion, which exception was Deferred to the merits and answering, after denying indebtedness in any way to plaintiff, allege particularly that they refused to deliver said oar, liability and admit that admit the theft of the oar but deny/they offered $107.00 in oash which plaintiff refused to aooept, but'this offer was made under a mlsappreheneion and they did not understand iksk their legal rights, they allege further that they oould not be called upon to return the money paid for repairs, deny the value of the oar as alleged by plaintiff, $435.00, admit that plaintiff's oar was reoelved by them Jbr repairs Hay 37th, 1917, and allege that they completed their oontraot June 6th, 1917, notifying plaintiff, but that he failed to take the oar away from their establishment and that thpy exerolsed every reasonable oare and precaution and were not guilty of negllgenoe and that said oar was stolen from the street in front of respondent's garage without their knowledge and they did everything to reoover the oar in question, reporting to the Police Department and otherwise used every exertion but without avail, henoe pray for judgment.

We gather from the reoord the following substantial faots:

On the 15th of June, 1917 in a letter by the defendant [205]*205en Its letterhead wrote to plaintiff, and we quote same as followd
"We beg to advise that your Ford oar under license No. 31793 Is oomplete and ready for delivery; storage oharges at twenty five (.35) per day will aoorue on June 15th."

Plaintiff In this oase substantially testifies that he owned a Ford touring oar, whloh he bought sometime In May, 1917, and meeting with an aooldent he delivered the oar In question for repairs, to Ur. Dlokerson of defendant company; that he went to their establishment while still in bad shape, oaused by the ao-oldent In question and that Ur. Dlokerson informed him that they would put the oar In proper shape and olaiming that they had done so plaintiff went there to defendant's business place about the 9th of August and was presented with a bill for $107.00.

Q. What did Ur. Dlokerson tell you at the time when you paid that bill of $107.007
A, Well, I went In and looked around for my oar and I didn't see It anywhere, Ur. Dlokerson was engaged talking to a lady and I didn't dUccfczx disturb him, so I went and looked in the baok part of the building without seeing my oar, and finally said to Mr. Dlokerson, "Well Dlokerson lets oaeh up for that automobile; he said alright 1 am always willing to take money, presented the bill for $107.00 and I, said to him I owe you another bill and he says, yes for the storage of that oar, 1 was to pay twenty five oents a day for the storage and Ur. Dlokerson oontinued, we won't settle that now beoauee that bill will be brought down considerably, made lose, so I simply paid him for the repairs.
Q. What did he tell you he was going to ao with the oari
A. I said, Where is the oar, he eaid Its- In the warehouse, I said X would like to get it and he replied, I am going to tell you, X will have the oar out, it is a little dsucdty dirty and dusty and X am going to olean the oar up, X informed him then that X had to go to Kenner that evening and asked him If he would ha have the oar at my house at three o'olook, and his reply was, yes indeed, X Will sure have it there, and X thought It was alright.

[206]*206This witness oontinuee in tal's testimony: the time ap-proaohing and the oar not ooming, I rang up on the telephone and spoke to Ur. Diokerson and he said "Oh i I have been trying to ks oatoh you ever sinoe you left my office this monring, look herd ¡fcsnHBüdcHg sometime ago there was a oar stolen from my place and we have just found out it was your oar, I replied thats queer, so after a further conversation, the witness called upon Mr. Dickerson who offered to return to him the amount he had paid for repairs $107.00, Diokerson told him that the oar was tie stolen about the third of July and this conversation was on August 9th and he also informed me that he had notified the polioe and had endeavored to traoe the oar without suooess; he then goes on to testify that he had paid $430.00 for the oar in question but in a oolllssion with another auto the oar had been badly damaged and he goes on to describe the damages whloh were repaired by the defendant oompany.

In his testimony on rebuttal this same witness testified that in the aooident referred to he had three ribs broken, extracted collar bone was bruised, he had to have his teeth /jeasferató* all of them, and he was in a bad shape and that was the reason he was not able to go for his oar prior to the time testified to; he was oompelled to hire another oar to take his wife out riding, who was also injured in the aooident; he testifies to reoeiving the letter, charging twenty five oents per day for storage and to this ask extent presents for consideration his case.

One of the defendants, Mr. Diokerson in his testimony says:

Q. Mr. Diokerson, you are being sued here for the value of a Ford oar which it is alleged was stolen from your place of bus-flhere iness, we admit the theft of the oar. /Sun was the oar when it was stolen?
A. It was within-as near as I can tell, about twenty five feet pf the front door of our garage, parked against the ourbstone on Howard Avenue, that was our place of husmees.
[207]*207The oar was stolen daring the daytime on the 13th, 5 o'clock In the afternoon, broad day light*
Q. lExxxc ilhy was that oar out In the street!
A, Because we simply didn't have room to keep It inside any more, our work was hanging, we had lots of work to do and we needed floor splaoe to aotually work on other jobs.

Witness testifies that his firm did a general servíoe business but nothing else and further testifies that the oar was brought Into the garage every night and never left out, that the oar was in the possession of defendant about two months; that he had notified plaintiff to take this oar away, Wfrfcrtra* he further testifies that there were eighteen or twenty oars out there in front until night time and they were all parked against the ourb-stone, he admits that he aooepted the prloe of the repairs íes knowing the oar had been stolen and that he expeoted through the polloe to get the oar baok, henoe made the statement that he woulki return It to plaintiff, that he endeavored to do that but without avail, that he had notified the polloe department about the 4th of July and that was the time he knew the oar In question had been missing.

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5 Pelt. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnbull-v-automobile-service-co-lactapp-1922.