Jones v. Boswell
250 S.W. 3d 140, 2008 WL 388607, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 1093 (2008)
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Rule of Law:
A possessory lien for repairs on personal property is only valid if the owner of the property consents to the repairs. A repair person who retains possession of property against the owner's will without a valid lien commits trespass to chattel.
Facts:
- David and Connie Jones owned a Caterpillar bulldozer which they were leasing.
- Their employee, Morris Jones, rented the bulldozer to Chris Lloyd without the Joneses' knowledge or authorization.
- While being used by Lloyd, the bulldozer fell into a cattle tank.
- Lloyd, without the Joneses' consent, hired David Boswell to retrieve and repair the bulldozer.
- Boswell performed the towing and repair services.
- Lloyd provided parts but did not pay Boswell for his labor or the towing charges.
- When Connie Jones learned of the situation and contacted Boswell, Boswell refused to release the bulldozer until his bill was paid.
Procedural Posture:
- David and Connie Jones sued David Boswell for trespass to chattel in a Texas trial court.
- The trial court ruled as a matter of law that Chris Lloyd was not acting as the Joneses’ agent.
- The jury returned a verdict finding that Boswell did not commit a trespass.
- The trial court entered a take-nothing judgment in favor of Boswell.
- The Joneses, as appellants, appealed the judgment to the Court of Appeals of Texas, Eastland, an intermediate appellate court.
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Issue:
Does a repair person commit trespass to chattel by refusing to return property to its owner when the repairs were authorized by a third party without the owner's consent or agency relationship?
Opinions:
Majority - Justice Rick Strange
Yes, a repair person commits trespass to chattel by refusing to return property under these circumstances. Texas law requires the owner's consent to create a valid statutory or constitutional possessory lien for repairs. The trial court found as a matter of law that Chris Lloyd was not an agent of the Joneses, and Boswell did not challenge this finding. Because the Joneses, the owners, never authorized the towing or repairs, Boswell had no valid possessory lien. Therefore, his refusal to release the dozer upon the Joneses' demand constituted a wrongful detention of their property, which is a trespass as a matter of law.
Analysis:
This case reinforces the strict requirement of owner consent for the creation of a mechanic's possessory lien in Texas. It clarifies that a third party's authorization for repairs, without actual or apparent agency, is insufficient to encumber an owner's property with a lien. The decision protects owners from unauthorized charges and affirms that a good-faith belief by the repairer is not a substitute for the owner's actual consent. This precedent solidifies the principle that wrongfully retaining possession after a demand for return, even if possession was initially lawful, constitutes a trespass.
