329 Mass. 28 | Mass. | 1952
This case is here on the defendant’s appeal from an order of the Appellate Division dismissing a report of a judge of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston. It appears from the report to be an action of contract or tort to recover compensation for damage to the plaintiff’s automobile alleged to have been received while stored in the defendant’s garage in Boston. The judge refused the defendant’s request for a ruling that “The evidence, considered most favorably toward the plaintiff, is not sufficient as a matter of law to warrant a finding for the plaintiff,” and found for the plaintiff. The issue raised by the refusal of the request was reported.
There was evidence as follows. The plaintiff left his automobile sedan in the defendant’s garage at about 2 p.m. on February 26, 1951. He was a regular daily patron of the garage and in accordance with his usual practice drove his automobile into a parking bay on the third floor of the garage facing the wall in such a position that it would have to be backed up in order to move it to a different location. On that morning the plaintiff had driven the automobile about the city and had used both forward and reverse gears. When he left the automobile in the garage it was in good operating condition and undamaged. About an hour after leaving the automobile he received a telephone call from one Race, the regular attendant on the third floor of the garage, and was told that there was something wrong with the transmission linkage and that the automobile would not drive forward or backward. • Race said that he had spoken to the mechanic who told him that it would cost only $1 or $2 to make repairs. The plaintiff told Race to have the mechanic fix it. A little later Race called again and told the plaintiff that the trouble with the automobile was in the transmission and not in the linkage and that the garage did not repair transmissions. The plaintiff told Race that he would have the Russell Pontiac people fix the automobile and would arrange to have them take it that
It is not disputed that the defendant was a bailee for hire. As such it would be hable for damage to the bailed property from failure to exercise that degree of care which would reasonably be expected from an ordinarily prudent man in similar circumstances. Hanna v. Shaw, 244 Mass. 57, 59. Rudy v. Quincy Market Cold Storage & Warehouse Co. 249
There was no error in refusing to grant the requested ruling.
Order dismissing report affirmed.