Bank of Grottoes v. Brown

8 F.2d 321 | 4th Cir. | 1925

ROSE, Circuit Judge.

Hatnet Brown, is a citizen of New Tork and he was plaintiff below. He kept some thousands of dollars in coupon Liberty Bonds, as well as some jewelry, in a safe deposit box which he rented from the .Bank of Grottoes, plaintiff in error here, and defendant below. For brevity, it will be called the bank, and he the renter.

On June 29, 1921, burglars got into the hank and forced or blew open the doors of its vault. Its o-wn cash and readily convertible assets were kept within the vault in a steel safe. The evidence does not disclose whether there was any attempt to break that open. If there was, it failed. There were also in the vault two sets of safe deposit boxes, differing in the way in which they were secured from unauthorized entry. The boxes themselves seem to have been all alike. They were the familiar oblong sheet metal containers, used in most, if not all, safe deposit vaults. Those of one set, among which the renter’s was included, were not otherwise secured than by a separate lock on each box. The boxes were put upon a shelf within the vault. One who was within it could stretch out his hand and remove any one of them he chose. He could take it where he wished, and could open it at leisure with any stone or tool which happened to be available. Most of this class of boxes were opened while in the vault or elsewhere and their contents extracted. The other set, as is usual in safe deposit boxes, were put into separate receptacles, each of which was itself secured by a steel door and lock. Before the box could be reached, this door had to be smashed. When so much was success*322fully accomplished, the box .could then be taken out and its own lock forced, or the box itself broken open. There was uneontradicted evidence that after the burglary the appearance of the protective doors of these better guarded boxes indicated that the burglars had attempted to get into them and had failed. According to. the testimony, the renter had never been in tbe vault; Ms box always being banded to Mm in the banking room itself. He said that he supposed Ms box, when in tbe vault, .was in a locked receptacle such as he had often seen ^ in the safe deposit vaults of the cities.

His claim to recover against the bank was founded upon the allegation that it had failed to exercise ordinary care in guarding Ms valuables. Some 16 months elapsed after tbe burglary before he brought suit. The bank pleaded a one-year period of limitations, on the theory that Ms action was not one wMeh, in case of Ms death, could have been brought by Ms personal representatives. The learned court below held tMs plea had. It was clearly right in treating as immaterial the fact that the declaration was so phrased as to sound in tort. In Virginia, the law is well settled that the object of the action, and not its form, determines the applicable period of limitation. Birmingham v. C. & O. Railroad, 98 Va. 548, 37 S. E. 17; Burk; Pleading and Practice, § 220. The suit might as well have been brought in contract and such a right of action would have survived to an executor or administrator. The tort set up is not one unconnected with contract, nor one which affected the person of the renter only, and not his estate, such as would have been an assault, a libel, a slander, or the like. Tbe learned court below correctly held thattbe suit was virtually ex contractu, tbe right of action for which would have survived to an executor or administrator. Lee’s Administrator v. Hill, 87 Va. 497, 12 S. E. 1052, 24 Am. St. Rep. 666, eited with approval in Patton v. Brady, 184, U. S. 615, 22 S. Ct. 493, 46 L. Ed. 713.

The bank says the court erred in excluding from service on the jury wMch tried the case all persons who were directors or stockholders in any bank, as well as all who were renters of safe deposit boxes. Tbe former class was shut out upon a motion of tbe renter, over the' objection of tbe bank, whereupon the latter asked that no box renter be permitted to serve, and such order was made. We do not find it necessary to consider what merit there might be in tMs assignment, under circumstances other than those disclosed by this record. The jury, after the ease was given to them, twice reported their inability to agree. Apparently, at that time, neither party wanted to be put to tbe expense and delay of a new trial,, and they mutually stipulated to accept a majority verdict. The bank then knew who were on the jury, and the agreement made was clearly a waiver of any objection to the way in wMeh they were originally selected. ■

The renter, in order to recover, had to prove that.the bank bad negleeted to take tbe measures to safeguard Ms property customarily used in that eommuMty by ordinarily careful institutions, fairly comparable in size and other conditions with it. For this purpose tbe renter was entitled to prove the general practice of well-conducted country banks of the neighborhood. He, of course, could not show what this or that particular institution did, and ask the jury to accept its practice as the standard of the care to wMeh the bank was required to conform. Southern Railway Co. v. Mauzy, 98 Va. 692, 37 S. E. 285, and other eases too numerous to mention. On the other hand, it is admitted that, if he had chosen to do so, he might have put on the stand one or many witnesses, each of whom could properly have been allowed to testify, if he could, that he was familiar with the general usage of the banks of the county, and he could tell the jury what that usage was. The renter did neither of these things. He proved what was donb by each and every bank in tbe county of a size and haying the resources which made it fairly comparable with the defendant. TMs he did by a number of witnesses, each of whom testified as to one bank only, but among them they proved the practice of every bank in the county fairly to-be considered in defendant’s class. Tbe learned judge below held the renter was entitled to show the practice of the banks of the community generally, and it seemed to Mm that it made no difference whether the evidence was given by one witness, who knew the usages of all of them, or by many witnesses, each of whom proved what a single bank did. We think he was right.

We have considered the other objections iqade by tbe bank to tbe rulings on tbe evidence. It is sufficient to say we do not find harmful error in any of them.

Some criticism is made of the phrasing- of the instructions given. We do not see that it is justified. What was said was in itself correct enough. The jury were told that the bank was not liable unless it failed to use ordinary care for the protection of *323Hie renter’s property, and that upon him rested the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that such care was not exercised. Ordinary care was defined as the care which ordinarily prudent persons customarily used under the same, or practically the same, circumstances. The real complaint of: the bank, so far as concerns the charge, is that it did not go far enough, in that it failed to tell the jury what the latter needed to know, and what the bank had asked they should be told. Its request that the jury should be instructed that the bank was not an insurer of the renter’s property was in substance given when the court told the jury that the bank was not liable unless it had failed to- use ordinary care. That clearly negatived any possibility that the bank could be held liable as an insurer.

Nor are we impressed by the contention that the court should have- given a series of instructions, specifying that the bank was not answerable merely because it omitted to take this or that precaution mentioned in the pleadings or in the evidence. As an abstract proposition each of these was doubtless in itself sound enough, but, for all that, to have given one or all of them might well have misled the jury. It is perfectly true that there was no specific safeguard that the bank was bound to provide in a sense that its failure to do so would necessarily impose liability upon it. It might omit one or many precautions used by other banks, and still not be answerable, providing the jury thought it had substituted for them something else equally effective. After the jury had heard all the evidence, it was for them to say whether the bank had in faet done as much as an ordinarily prudent institution would have done.

Error is assigned and vigorously argued to the failure- of the court to charge the jury that the negligence of the defendant in any event must bo such as contributed approximately (sic) to the plaintiff’s loss, and that if the jury believed from the evidence, had the defendant employed the best and safest devices and equipment that had been described to the jury, robbers would still have reached the plaintiff’s property, they must find for the defendant. Obviously, this instruction should not have been granted in the fo-rm in which it was tendered. In the connection in whieh “approximately” was used, the jury would not have understood the word to mean the same thing as “pro-ximately.” We are not to be understood as suggesting that the court would be justified in refusing a prayer merely because it contained something whieh the court could see was an obvious clerical , error. Such slips are common enough. In the conditions under whieh trials at nisi prius are necessarily conducted, the most highly trained minds, whether on the bench or at the bar, do not always register with absolute accuracy. Hence the Act of February 26, 1919 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 1246), whieh requires us to give judgment without regard to clerical errors, defects, or exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties. Indeed, this enactment is itself an application of the very principle the bank says the jury should have been told to apply in the instant ease. It argues that no lack of precaution on its part should east it in damages, if the renter wo-uld have lost its property, even had they been taken, precisely as Congress has told us, we may not sot aside the judgment because the court below erred, if that error did not do the bank any harm.

There is really little or nothing in the evidence to whieh the asked-fo-r instruction was applicable. As already stated, there is no doubt that the burglars had made their way into the vault, and as little that they had not gotten the bank’s money out of its safe. There was uncontradicted evidence that they had apparently attempted to effect an entrance into- the better secured safe deposit boxes and had failed to do so, and there was no question whatever that they apparently had no such trouble in making their way to the contents of the comparatively unprotected box of the renter and others in like case with him. Moreover, the court had, during the course of the trial, told the jury that their only inquiry was whether the renter’s securities we-re in his box at the time of the burglary and “were they taken by the burglars,” and, “if so, was that caused by want of ordinary care on the part of the bank.”

In vie.w of all the testimony in the case, and of what the court had previously said, we are convinced that the bank could not have been hurt by the failure of the learned judge to give the instruction for which the bank asked.

Affirmed.

The late Judge WOODS concurred in the affirmance o-f the judgment below, bnt died before ho passed upon the above opinion.

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