208 A.D. 427 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
The action was brought to recover SI,435 alleged damages suffered by the plaintiffs by reason of the negligent failure of the defendant to safely store a quantity of Zinfandel grapes belonging to the plaintiffs and which had been received over the defendant’s railroad and were contained in a freight car in the defendant’s yard in Jersey City. The defendant was paid the freight charges for transportation of the grapes and had also been paid demurrage
I think the evidence is quite sufficient to establish 'the fact that the 410 boxes of grapes which were missing had been removed from the car by theft. There remained in the car when visited by plaintiffs.’ employee and the defendant’s superintendent 218 boxes of the 628 that were in the car when the same was locked by the plaintiffs on the Saturday night before. That the plaintiffs were justified in their statement that the car had been robbed is sustained by the fact of the-removal of the two strong padlocks from the doors, and that the hasps on both sides holding the doors shut had been pried off by an iron bar or jimmy which was found nearby. When the car was locked on Saturday night the keys to the locks were delivered by the son of one of the plaintiffs’ employees who locked the car, to his father and were held by him until the car was found open on the following Monday. The fact that the car
It is conceded by both parties that at the time of the loss of these grapes the defendant occupied the position of warehouseman, and that its character of a common carrier of the grapes had ended, and that under well-settled principles of law the defendant, if liable to the plaintiffs for the loss of the grapes, was not liable as an insurer but merely because of negligence on its part in holding the grapes as a warehouseman. The plaintiffs gave no evidence with reference to defendant’s acts or conduct in keeping said grapes after they were left in the car in defendant’s yard on Saturday night, October thirtieth. Plaintiffs being unable to obtain their grapes which had been left with the defendant for storage, raised the presumption that the defendant had been negligent. This presumption, however, was removed by the indubitable proof that the grapes were stolen, and where the absence of the goods stored was explained, as it was by the evidence, to be by reason of the same being stolen, the burden then devolved upon the plaintiffs to show that the defendant had in some manner been negligent and that the loss resulted from such negligence. As before stated the plaintiffs gave no evidence to establish such negligence. Had some proof been offered on the part of the plaintiffs that the defendant had inadequately guarded its yard or had failed to maintain a sufficient number of watchmen to patrol the same or had in some other manner been negligent, the plaintiffs then could have asked the jury to find the defendant negligent, but no proof whatever was offered upon the subject of defendant’s conduct as a warehouseman of said grapes. In the absence of such proof we do not think any issue arose, and that the court improperly directed a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor. (Stewart v. Stone, 127 N. Y. 500; Draper v. President, etc., D. & H. C. Co., 118 id. 118; Claflin v. Meyer, 75 id. 260; Southern Railway v. Prescott, 240 U. S. 632.) In the latter case Mr. Justice Hughes, writing for the Supreme Court of the United States, said (at p. 640): “It.was explicitly provided that in case the property was not removed within the specified time it should be kept subject to liability ‘ as warehouseman only.’ The Railway Company was therefore liable only in case of negligence. The plaintiff, asserting neglect, had the burden of establishing it. This burden did not shift. As it is the duty of the warehouseman to deliver upon proper demand, his failure to do so, without excuse, has been regarded as making a
In the recent case of Wilson v. Christal (187 App. Div. 660) this court unanimously held in the opinion by Mr. Justice Page (at p. 661) as follows: “ When the failure to deliver is shown, a prima facie case of negligence is made out. (Herrman v. New England Nav. Co., 143 App. Div. 551.) The burden of an explanation is then on the defendant and that burden is satisfied if he shows that the goods were stolen. (Claflin v. Meyer, 75 N. Y. 260.) The burden is then upon the plaintiff of showing that the negligence of the warehouseman contributed to the theft.”
It, therefore, follows that the judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted-, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Dowling, Smith, Finch and Martin, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.