Zeiger v. Woodson

202 S.W. 163, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 1918
DocketNo. 807.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 163 (Zeiger v. Woodson) 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
Zeiger v. Woodson, 202 S.W. 163, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 251 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

P. E. Woodson and wife, Kathryn S. Woodson, brought this suit against Charles Zeiger to recover the sum of §1,300, the alleged value of a certain trunk and its contents. Plaintiffs below alleged that defendant, Zeiger, during October, 1916, was operating a hotel in the city of El Paso, Tex., and that while plaintiffs, with their two little children, were stopping at said hotel as guests, they delivered a trunk cheek to a bell boy then employed at said hotel for the purpose of having the trunk and its contents, then in the baggage room in the Union Railroad Depot in said city, represented by such check, brought to them at said hotel. Plaintiffs alleged that defendant received said trunk and its contents, but failed and neglected to deliver same to them; that defendant, his agents and employes, have so negligently and carelessly handled said trunk, in violation of its contract- to deliver same to plaintiffs, as to allow said trunk and its contents to become lost to them. Plaintiffs stated the items contained in the trunk, giving the value of each item. Defendant demurred generally and specially to plaintiff’s petition, made general denial, answered specially that the first information he had concerning said trunk was some 24 hours after the arrival of plaintiffs at the hotel, and that, if such trunk was lost to plaintiffs, plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence in not sooner calling defendant’s attention to their trunks.

On special issues submitted, the jury found the following facts; Long well’s Transfer Company delivered to- defendant, its employés or agents, the trunk and its contents sued for; the agents or employés of defendant in the discharge of their duties misplaced, lost, or delivered said trunk to another than plaintiffs ; the reasonable value to plaintiffs at El Paso, Tex., of the trunk and its contents, was the sum of §950; P. E. Woodson delivered his wife’s trunk check to defendant’s bell boy on Sunday, October 8, 1916; it was within the scope of the authority' of such bell boy, as an employé of defendant, to receive such trunk check; defendánt’s employés either negligently or willfully so handled or assisted in handling or failed to handle plaintiff’s trunk or the check thereof as to cause plaintiffs to lose their trunk; the plaintiffs were guests of room No. 10 of the defendant’s hotel from the morning of October 8th to the morning of October 9, 1916; neither of the plaintiffs made inquiry of Zeiger or the hotel clerk about their trunk on the afternoon of October 8th; in failing to make such inquiry, plaintiffs did not fail to use such care and caution as an ordinarily prudent person under the circumstances would have .used; plaintiffs were not receiving accommodations at the Zeiger Hotel for less than the regular or day rate; plaintiffs did not have any place of abode or residence other than the Zeiger Hotel on October 8th and 9th; there were no articles in the trunk which were not such as are ordinarily used by travelers.

The judgment of the court was for the plaintiffs for the sum of $950, with 6 pey cent, interest from the 9th day of October, 1916, and costs.

Appellant presents 140 assignments:

[1] The first five assignments of error, in various ways, complain of the action of the trial court in refusing to suppress the deposition of P. E. Woodson, claiming that the no-' tary did not make proper certificate, nor show that the deposition was subscribed and sworn to before such notary; that the notary did not properly certify and authenticate his acts of depositing same in the mail; nor require the postmaster to certify that he had received same from the notary; because the witness stated that he had read the interrogatories before making answer thereto; that it does not affirmatively appear that the witness was under oath at the time his answers were taken. The final certificate of the notary shows that the answers were sworn to by the witness before the officer. The law does not require that the witness be sworn before his answers are reduced to writing. Weisgarver v. Yinger, 122 S. W. 925, 128 S. W. 1190. The rule invoked applies only to depositions taken under oral examination. The other objections to the deposition are not well taken. Railway v. Mosley, 103 Tex. 79, 124 S. W. 90; Hartford et al. v. Becton, 103 Tex. 236, 125 S. W. 883; Missouri, K. & T. Railway Co. v. Davis, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 547, 116 S. W. 425.

[2] Objection is made to a consideration of the sixth, seventh, and eighth assignments, and we think the objections are well taken. The assignments are not followed by sufficient *166 statement to explain and support the propositions as required by the rule for briefing. Rule 31 (142 S. W. xiii).

[3] The record does not show that a bill of exception was taken to the court’s ruling on the motion for continuance. Insurance Co. v. Huff, 175 S. W. 465. The assignments are not considered.

[4] The ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth assignments are grouped, and claim error in overruling the general and special exceptions to the petition. Objection is made to a consideration of these assignments under the ruling in Bray et al. v. Sewall et al., 171 S. W. 795, and Pecos Ry. v. Amorillo Railway, 171 S. W. 1103, We will consider the assignments only to the extent of holding that the petition is good as against a general exception.

[5] The thirteenth assignment claims error in overruling special exception No. 5 to the petition, the exception being:

“It does not affirmatively appear that the articles mentioned in Exhibit A thereto attached were such articles as are ordinarily used by travelers stopping at hotels as guests of such hotel. Nor that each and every article mentioned in Exhibit A were upon the occasion mentioned even partly used, or were to be used by the plaintiff as articles of clothing while stopping at defendant’s hotel.”

It was not error to overrule the exception. The petition stated that the trunk contained plaintiff’s “baggage,” and the exhibit itemized the articles and their values. “Baggage” is not necessarily defined as “such articles as are. ordinarily used by travelers stopping at hotels as guests,” nor is it necessary to constitute an article as “baggage” that it was partly used or to be used as an article of clothing. The term “baggage” has a' broader significance than that contained in the exception. Volume 3, Ency. Dig. of Texas Reported Oases, beginning at page 1053 are many cases defining and discussing the term, to which we must for brevity refer.

[6] The fourteenth assignment claims error in overruling an exception to the petition and exhibit, stating the exception that it “fails to show whether the figures sét opposite the various articles represent the price, the market value, a reasonable value, or the extrinsic value of such items,” and refers us to M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Hailey as sustaining the proposition. The case is not in point. The rule is stated by Mr. Justice Neill in City of San Antonio v. Pizzini, 58 S. W. 635. The rule as to the damage to be applied is a rule of evidence, and not of pleading.

[7]

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202 S.W. 163, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeiger-v-woodson-texapp-1918.