The plaintiff bases his claim primarily on the breach of a bailor-bailee relationship with the bank in respect to the alleged missing contents of the box, or, in the alternative, if the relationship is not that of a bailorbailee, at least a duty on the part of the bank to exercise ordinary care to safeguard the contents of the box, contending that the evidence of negligence in this respect is sufficient to create a jury question.
The defendant relies on the decision in
Tow v. Evans,
In commenting on numerous actions involving a claim by a depositor against a bank or safe deposit company for the loss of the contents of a container in other jurisdictions, the writer of the annotation in
We do not regard the mere labeling of the relationship in
Tow v. Evans,
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Whatever the label attached to the contract here involved, the facts demand a determination that the bank was' involved in an undertaking for a consideration to safeguard the personal property of another in respect to whatever was placed in the safe deposit box, without acquiring any knowledge of the contents of the box, and that it exercised complete dominion at all times over this box, regardless of its contents, except when the customer requested access thereto. Had the customer merely delivered to the bank a locked container, which the bank undertook to safeguard for a fee, this court would have no difficulty in determining that a bailment existed, and that the bank was a depositary for hire.
Code
§ 12-301. Had he delivered a sealed package of money, or property or securities, for the purpose of having the same safely kept, and the identical thing returned, it would be a special deposit, which is treated as a form of bailment.
Code
§ 12-303; see
Williams v. Bennett,
The parties do not cite, and research fails to disclose any Georgia decision directly in point. The early case of
Merchants Nat. Bank of Savannah v. Guilmartin,
Summarized, these cases impose upon the bank, once the fact of loss of a special deposit is shown, the duty of affirmatively showing the exercise of the required degree of care, and this is in accord with the law of bailment as it now exists in this
*476
State. See
Code
§§ 12-103, 12-104. In
Dougherty v. Central Bank
&c.
Corp.,
We view the relationship here created, as between the customer and the bank, as one of bailor and bailee, making the bank a depositary for hire under a duty to exercise ordinary care, the proof of which is cast upon the bank after proof of the fact of loss by the customer.
Code
§§ 12-104, 12-301, 12-404. This burden on the bailee is regarded as a presumption of negligence, i.e., a rebuttable inference, thus placing on the bailee the affirmative duty of producing evidence of its diligence. See
Hall & Ham v. Stone,
In view of the foregoing the trial court properly refused to grant a summary judgment for the bank.
Judgment affirmed.
