Wells-Fargo & Co. Express v. Sobel

125 S.W. 925, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 62, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 925 (Wells-Fargo & Co. Express v. Sobel) 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
Wells-Fargo & Co. Express v. Sobel, 125 S.W. 925, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 62, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 308 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

L. Sobel instituted this action against Wells-Far go & Co. Express, a corporation, to recover $2,000 actual and $3,000 exemplary damages for an assault alleged to have been committed upon him by one D. J. Coleman, an employe of defendant, while the said Coleman was engaged in the performance of his duties as such employe, the said employe then and there, in making such assault, acting within the scope of his duties as such. It was also alleged that, after the assault had been committed, defendant, *64 with a full knowledge of the circumstances, ratified the same. The defendant by way of answer urged a general demurrer and several special exceptions to the petition. The general demurrer and all the special, exceptions but one were sustained, whereupon the plaintiff filed a trial amendment, and defendant by supplemental answer renewed its special exceptions to the petition as amended, which were overruled. Defendant also made general denial.

Upon a trial without a jury the court rendered judgment for plaintiff for $250 actual damages. From the judgment defendant appeals. The trial court filed conclusions of fact and law.

The first three assignments of error assail the ruling of the trial court in overruling several special exceptions to the petition. There is no merit in either of the assignments, nor the several propositions thereunder, and they are severally overruled.

The other assignments attack the judgment on the ground generally that the undisputed evidence shows that the man Coleman, in making the assault upon appellee, was not acting within the scope of his employment as agent and servant of appellant, but. independently and in his own private quarrel, and that, therefore, appellant is not liable. By way of answer to these assignments, which we have concluded present no error, we here set out the conclusions of fact and law of the trial court, which are here adopted as our conclusions.

“The plaintiff, a merchant in the city of Beaumont, in the latter part of 1907, had a shipment of gloves to him from the wholesale house of Mason, Campbell & Co., at Poughkeepsie, H. Y., same coming into Beaumont through the defendant company, which is a corporation and operates as a common carrier of goods by rail, maintaining an office in the city of Beaumont then under the superintendence of the witness Smith. When the goods arrived at the Beaumont office of defendant they were sent to plaintiff’s place of business by defendant’s local delivery wagon. The package appearing to be in bad order, plaintiff declined to take them without their being checked up and compared with his bill received from the shipper. The driver for defendant carried them back to the office, as the rules of the company require such matters to be adjusted at the office. Later plaintiff went to defendant’s office with the bill, and was referred to the ‘on-hand’ clerk, the witness Coleman. The gloves were counted by this clerk two or more times with varying results, sometimes finding more and sometimes less than called for by the bill, and plaintiff, who was present and saw the goods opened, accepted them, saying that if there were only two or three pairs short he would make no complaint. At his shop, however, he counted them himself, and found the package wanting in fourteen pairs called for by the bill. He promptly returned to the office of defendant, but, it appearing that the clerks had gone for the day, he did not take the matter up with them until the next day. On the next day the defendant, through its superintendent and ‘on-hand’ clerk, declined to reopen the question, declaring it settled by the plaintiff’s having receipted for the goods as being in good order. Plaintiff then sent forward his check to Mason, Campbell & Co., for the amount of the bill less the price of the fourteen pairs, together with an affidavit declaring that the *65 package had been delivered to him by defendant short of fourteen pairs, suggesting that they put in their claim against the express company. This course was taken by Mason, Campbell & Co., the claim being lodged by them with the American Express Co., defendant’s connecting carrier. The file of papers and correspondence relating to the claim finally came to the office of defendant at Beaumont, and the report from defendant through its ‘omhand’ clerk was that the goods had been receipted for as in good order by plaintiff. This report reached Mason, Campbell & Co., who then wrote to the plaintiff demanding pay for the balance of the bill. Plaintiff sent a reply, saying that he did not intend to pay for what the clerks of the express company stole, and insisting that his statement of the quantity of the gloves was correct, and claiming that the clerk had miscounted. He referred to the clerk as a shyster. This letter in turn found its way into the files of the defendant company and was by them referred to the ‘on-hand’ clerk, the witness Coleman, for his attention. On reading the letter he appeared to have shown it to others of the clerks and employes of defendant company. On the same day he, Coleman, went one or more times to plaintiff’s place of business, telling plaintiff he should come to the express office and adjust the claim of shortage, and the driver of one of the defendant’s wagons also left a message or request with the plaintiff. Plaintiff, having no clerk, waited for his children to return from school so that he could leave the store in their charge, and immediately afterwards went to the office of defendant, as requested, thinking that the claim would be adjusted so as to relieve him of claim from Mason, Campbell & Co. On reaching the office he was directed into the rear part of the building, where Coleman was standing by a barrel with the file of papers relating to the claim in his hand and another clerk close by, and as plaintiff came up he, Coleman, reproached plaintiff about the insulting letter. Then after some words of conciliation on plaintiff’s part, the witness Coleman produced a paper for plaintiff to sign, and by commands and threats, and -threatening gestures and manner, compelled plaintiff to sign same, the plaintiff signing without reading; then as plaintiff raised his head from a stooping posture, assumed in signing the paper over the barrel, the witness Coleman struck plaintiff in the mouth, loosening one of his teeth, which afterwards fell out, and at the same time threatening further violence if complaint should be filed with the civil authorities. The bvstanding clerk and the witness Coleman then signed as witnesses the document "which plaintiff had thus been compelled to sign, and same became part of the files of the office relating to this claim, and was regularly thereafter used by the defendant in its correspondence with the American Express Co., and in the usual course of its business relating to the claim. The substance of the document which the plaintiff wras thus compelled to sign was a withdrawal of his claim for a shortage in the package of gloves and a retraction of his remarks as to thieves among the express company’s clerks. The obtaining of a statement in regard to the claim from plaintiff was in the line of employment of the ‘on-hand’ clerk, *66 Coleman. I estimate tli.e actual damage of plaintiff, arising out of the assault, at two hundred and fifty dollars.

“Conclusions of

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 925, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 62, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-fargo-co-express-v-sobel-texapp-1910.