Court of Civil Appeals of Texas, 1911

Morris v. Shuttles Bros. & Lewis

Morris v. Shuttles Bros. & Lewis
Court of Civil Appeals of Texas · Decided June 17, 1911 · Rainey
139 S.W. 1053; 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1253 (South Western Reporter)

Morris v. Shuttles Bros. & Lewis

Opinion of the Court

RAINEY, C. J.

Appellant brought this suit to recover from appellees two diamond rings and a diamond stud, claiming that said jewels had been stolen by one Phelps and that appellees had come into possession of the same and refused to surrender the same to appellant. Appellees answered by general demurrer and general denial. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellees, from which this appeal is taken.

[1] The court excluded the depositions of R. A. Cope, deputy sheriff of Camp county, Tex., who testified that: “R. A. Morris and wife furnished him a description of the jewelry stolen from them, consisting of two gold watches, one pair of bracelets, three diamond rings, two diamond studs, several plain gold rings, and other small trinkets, and that he came to Dallas, Tex., in search of the jewelry and thief and found Otis M. Phelps in jail and talked with him, and he admitted steal *1054 ing the jewelry and took witness and Deputy Sheriff Ledbetter to each place where he had sold and pawned the jewelry. Some pieces of small value and the box where the jewelry was kept when stolen were found in Phelps’ valise. We found two of the rings at a jewelry store, and Phelps carried us to a man by the name of Wolf and stated in Wolf’s presence that he was the man to whom Phelps had sold two diamond rings and one diamond stud, and Wolf acknowledged that he got them and had sold them to Shuttles Bros. & Lewis. We got the bracelets, one watch and chain, and two plain gold rings from some pawnshop in Dallas, and two rings from a young lady in Cass county.”

We think the court erred in excluding said testimony. Plaintiff’s case was based on the theory that said jewelry had been stolen from them by one Phelps, and it was necessary to establish said theory. Other jewelry was stolen at the same time which was sold to different parties by Phelps. This was recovered through information from Phelps as to the parties to whom sold, and the box where the jewelry was kept when stolen was found in Phelps’ valise. This testimony all tended to show that Phelps stole the jewelry and was material in tracing and identifying the two diamond rings and the diamond stud that were stolen from plaintiff. This testimony, as it led to a discovery of the property, would have been clearly admissible' on the trial of Phelps for theft of said jewelry, and we cannot see why it was not legitimate in tracing and identifying it in the hands of ap-pellees.

[21. It was not essential that appellees when they bought the jewelry knew that it had been stolen or had notice of that fact, in ord.er for plaintiff to recover. If the property was taken from appellant without his consent and traced to the possession of appellees, then he is entitled to recover, as the title remained in him, notwithstanding appellees were innocent possessors.

Aside from the foregoing evidence, we are unwilling to let the judgment stand on the evidence that was admitted, and the court should have granted appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

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