4 Willson 509 | Tex. App. | 1892
Opinion by
§ 295. Evidence; effect of demurrer to; conversion of personal property stored with bailee; evidence of value when stored admissible to prove value at time of conversion. On the 20th day of July, 1887, appellant, who was plaintiff in the court below, delivered to the defendant for storage, certain household goods, books, etc., of the value of $450, for which the defendant receipted. The petition alleges that on the 29th day of September, 1890, defendant converted said property to its own use, and plaintiff claimed $450 actual and $500 as exemplary damages. In brief, the testimony shows that appellant, after depositing the goods on the date above mentioned with the defendant, moved to McMinnville, Tenn., where he resided until September, 1890, when he returned to Texas. It further shows that on September 18, 1890, he demanded his goods of the defendant, and offered to pay the storage charges on them, and take them away. Defendant informed him that the goods had been sold, but that it would do what was right in the matter, and for him to make out a list of the goods, and it would replace such of them as it could from its store and pay him for the remainder. A day or two afterwards it offered him $100 in settlement of his claim. It will be seen from the foregoing that the goods remained stored with the defendant something over three years before the demand for delivery was made by the plaintiff. In the meantime plaintiff had written to defendant about his goods from McMinnville, Tenn., and in answer to his
We are of the opinion that the judgment is erroneous. “A demurrer to the evidence is a demurrer to the competency of the evidence, and admits its sufficiency. Consequently, all a judge can decide on a demurrer to the evidence is whether any competent evidence was given or not; and, when there was competent evidence adduced in support of. the allegations in the petition, it is error to sustain a demurrer to the evidence.” [Harwood v. Blythe, 32 Tex. 804.] Ordinarily the office of a demurrer to evidence is to admit every fact and conclusion which the evidence conduces to prove. [Bradbury v. Reed, 23 Tex. 258.] Again, as was said in Dangerfield v. Paschal, 11 Tex. 579: “The defendants having demurred to plaintiff’s evidence, we must look to the plaintiff’s evidence alone; and if, under the issue joined, that evidence, with every reasonable deduction that a jury would be presumed to draw from it in favor of the plaintiff’s right, would not sustain the action, the judgment of the court below must stand.” [See, also, Booth v. Cotton, 13 Tex. 359.] While it is true that the court had previously to the sustaining of the demurrer to the evidence sustained an objection of defendant to the sufficiency and competency of the plaintiff’s answers to the
Reversed and remanded.