Wright v. Harned

163 S.W. 685, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 584
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 685 (Wright v. Harned) 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
Wright v. Harned, 163 S.W. 685, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 584 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

The following statement of the nature and result of the suit is taken from appellant’s brief:

Charles J. Wright, plaintiff belotv, appellant here, brought this suit in the district court of Harris county, against the defendant, Eli Earned, administrator of the estate of Frank Dunn, deceased, on September 22, 1910, to recover on a claim against the estate of said Frank Dunn aggregating $1,-975.60 — for a bronze casket, $1,800, for services and other things furnished, $175, alleging the presentment and rejection of all of said claims except $175.60.

The estate, in the meantime, having been closed by the delivery of the assets of same to Mrs. Sarah P. Dunn and Mrs. Annie Lee Eiche, as the persons interested therein, upon their application and bond therefor, with J. O. Eiche and J. J. Sweeney as sureties,, plaintiff, on November 16, 1912, filed his amended petition against the said Eli I-Iarn-ed, Sarah P. Dunn, Mrs. Annie Lee Eiche and her husband, J. O. Eiche, and J. J. Sweeney, to recover on said claim, alleging as grounds of recovery: First, that all of said material and services for which said claim was made were duly furnished, and were of the kind and quality reasonably proper and necessary for the burial and funeral of Frank Dunn, and the amounts charged therefor were the reasonable value thereof; second, that same were furnished in accordance with the express wishes of said Frank Dunn, made prior to his death, that plaintiff should take charge of his remains and give him a burial, compatible with and appropriate to his position in life, from a financial standpoint, and give due honor and credit to the same in his burial and funeral, said request having been made because of the fact that the relations between the said Frank Dunn and his wife *686 were estranged and inimical, a divorce suit being then pending; third, that upon the death of the said Frank Dunn, the petitioner was requested to take charge of his remains, and did so, and, for the purpose of furnishing the said Frank Dunn a funeral and burial, materials, and sendees which were in accordance with his position in life, and in accordance with his express wishes, plaintiff, for that purpose, and under that authority, and with the intent to carry out the said expressed wish, did furnish to the said Frank Dunn a casket and burial, material, and services necessary to render him such honor and appropriate credit in said funeral; that the entire immense estate, which was more than $300,000 in value, went at his death to his wife and his said daughter as the beneficiaries, and that it was no more than just and right that the said Dunn should have his wishes carried out with the expenditure of a small portion of said moneys on hand; that same would have been done, so petitioner is informed and believes, but for the relations of estrangement existing between the said Dunn and his wife at the time, of the death of said Dunn; said petition also alleges the turning over of said estate to the defendants, Mrs. DUnn and Mrs. Eiche and her husband, J. O. Eiche, and J. J. Sweeney, sureties, and prayed that upon a hearing he be given judgment ior said sum of money so due him for material furnished and services performed; said petition further alleging the presentment to the' administrator and the rejection of said claim by him.

The defendants answered with general demurrer and general denial, and answered specially that plaintiff had no right to collect said sum, because he had been notified by X X Sweeney, temporary administrator, and others, among them the heirs of said ’Dunn, that they would pick out a suitable and less expensive casket for the burial of said Dunn, and that they had done so; that, notwithstanding that fact, plaintiff refused to recognize the selection so made by the said administrator, selected a more expensive casket, and placed the body of said deceased therein, and refused to take it thereout, and that said Sweeney had the body, casket, and all removed to another undertaking establishment, and if the said casket has not been taken possession of by the plaintiff, it is at said undertaking establishment subject to his order.

Plaintiff replied by supplemental petition, demurring, denying, and specially excepting that said J. X Sweeney had any authority, as temporary administrator, to take any action in the premises in regard to the disposition of said remains, and further specially answered that, before any of the heirs or next of kin of the said Frank Dunn had given him any instructions of any kind, he had already ordered the casket and placed the body of the said Frank Dunn therein, and that said casket became thereby appropriated to that purpose, and valueless for use by any other person.

The court instructed the jury to find-for plaintiff in the sum of $175, the amount tendered by defendant, and against the plaintiff for the $1,800 sued for as the value of the casket; and on said charge the jury returned a verdict as instructed, upon which judgment was duly entered, and from which the plaintiff, after his motion for a new trial had been overruled, has appealed.

It was admitted that the estate of Frank Dunn was worth $300,000, and the evidence showed the presentment by plaintiff of his claim to the administrator, the approval of a portion of.it, and the rejection of the balance.

On Sunday night, October 3, 1909, Frank Dunn died suddenly, while automobile riding with his friend, L. A. De Voss. De Voss called up the undertaking parlors of plaintiff Wright by telephone, and directed an employs of Wright, who in Wright’s absence answered the call, to go and get the body and take it to the undertaking establishment, and these directions were carried out by plaintiff’s said employs. That night, shortly after Dunn’s death, P. V. Meyer, a nephew by marriage of Mr. Dunn’s wife, sent a telegram to Mrs. Dunn, who at that time was in Kentucky, notifying her of the death of her husband. Early next morning plaintiff also sent a telegram to the same effect to Mrs. Dunn. Mrs. Dunn did not reply to the telegram sent by plaintiff, but did reply to the one sent by Mr. Meyer, and her reply was received by him about 7:30 o’clock Monday morning, and was as follows: “Hold body; will get there Tuesday night.” Between 8 and 9 o’clock Monday morning Meyer went to the plaintiff’s undertaking establishment, and exhibited to plaintiff the telegram just received from Mrs. Dunn, and told plaintiff to make no arrangements other than to prepare the body for burial. This, however, had already been done. He further told plaintiff that no arrangements had to be made until the court appointed an administrator, and that he would return in the afternoon with the administrator, and select a casket and place the body in it until the family arrived, which would be Tuesday night. In the afternoon Meyer, accompanied by X J. Sweeney, who in the meantime had been appointed temporary administrator of Frank Dunn’s estate, returned to the undertaking parlors, and together selected a casket, the price of which was $250, and directed that it be suitably draped. Dater in the afternoon plaintiff ordered by telegraph a bronze casket from Dallas to be sent to Houston by express, the price of which was $1,800, and this casket reached Houston on Tuesday morning, and the body of Frank Dunn was placed in it by plaintiff. Later in the day Mr. Meyer again went to *687 the undertaking parlors, and then discovered that the body of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 685, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-harned-texapp-1914.