49 Neb. 280 | Neb. | 1896
The principles applicable to this case are simple, although its investigation has been somewhat difficult because of the immense mass of wholly irrelevant testimony which was introduced without objection, and which, under section 309 of the Code of Civil Procedure, should never have been made a part of the bill of exceptions. The action was by Greene against Butler to recover the value of a watch and chain which had been
The first question discussed seems to refer to the assignment that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. The undisputed facts are that Greene borrowed $30 from Butler and pledged his watch and chain as security for the debt. Butler placed, the watch in the safe and vault of the Bank of Johnson, where it remained for some weeks. The officers of the bank then insisted upon its removal, when Butler removed it and carried it on his person for some time and then placed it in a pocket of a summer suit which he deposited at the bottom of a trunk in a room which he and another occupied as a bedroom. Both occupants of the room were bachelors and usually absent during the day. The watch and chain were stolen from the trunk. There is evidence tending to show that one door of the room was not kept locked. It also appears that the room was frequented by a number of Butler’s acquaintances. An attempt was made to show that it was used as a resort for gamblers; but the most that can be said of the testimony in this respect is that Butler and his friends at times resorted to the room for the purpose of playing cards for small stakes. Enough does appear, however, to indicate that a number of persons at times had .access to the room, and Butler himself testifies that while he kept the watch there he looked for it every day, because, as he says, there were suspicious characters about, and one of the persons whom he deemed suspicious was his room-mate. The case was submitted to the jury on the theory that Butler was required to use ordinary care in keeping the watch, and we think there is enough in the evidence to sustain a finding that it was lost through his failure to exercise, such ordinary care.
It is next contended that there was error in assessing the amount of recovery. The value of the watch and chain, as fixed by the evidence, yas at least $150. The verdict was for $120.51. It is argued that the defendant did not claim a set-off for his debt and that the verdict therefore discloses that the jury was not governed by the evidence. The court, in stating the measure of damages, instructed the jury if they found for the plaintiff, to deduct the indebtedness from the value of the watch. This was evidently done by the jury. It is true no set-off was pleaded, and under the rule in Kitchen Hotel Co. v. Hammond, 30 Neb., 618, the instruction was erroneous. It submitted to the jury a consideration of a set-off not pleaded. But the defendant cannot complain. The verdict was, by this instruction, made less than the plaintiff was entitled to recover in case the jury found in his favor under the pleadings in the case. The defendant was in nowise prejudiced.
It is also claimed that the court gave undue prominence to the plaintiff’s case by instructing the jury particularly as to what it should consider in returning a verdict for the plaintiff, by way of ascertaining damages, without making a corresponding statement in case the
The fifth instruction is complained of. By this the court stated to the jury “that a pledge of personal property passes to the pledgee merely the possession with a right of retainer until the debt is paid for which the article pledged is given as security; and it is the duty of the pledgee to safely keep the property pledged without using it unless such use is necessary to its preservation.” It would have been better had this instruction not been given — the others fully covered the case; but we do not think that there was any prejudicial error in giving it. Standing alone, it would be erroneous as implying that the pledgee was an insurer of the property. But over and over again in the other instructions the jury was told that the defendant was only liable for a failure to exercise ordinary care, and we do not think that it was possible that the words “safely keep” in this instruction could have so overcome the idea so often expressed in the other instructions as to convey any notion that the defendant was liable except for a failure to use ordinary care. Another complaint made of this instruction is that it tells the jury that it is the duty of the pledgee to keep the property without using it unless its preservation requires such use. It is true there is no direct evidence that the loss of the watch was due to defendant’s carrying it on his person; but it is undoubtedly true as a general principle that a pledgee has no right to use the pledged property unless the character of the property is such as to render its use necessary for its preservation. There is testimony in the case, as we have said, showing that for some time Butler carried the watch on his person, and while it was not lost while so carrying it, the display made of the watch, and it may be here remarked that the defendant took great' pains to show that he had
Complaint is also made of the sixth instruction, whereby the jury was told that if there was an express contract to keep the watch and chain in the vault of the bank until the debt was paid, the defendant was bound to keep within the terms of his agreement. In connection with this, complaint is also made of the fourteenth instruction, whereby, among other things, it was said that if the defendant took the watch and chain out of the vault of the bank because the cashier told him to do so, and thereafter put it in an unsafe place and did not take such care as an ordinarily prudent person usually takes of his own goods, and by reason of such want of care the property was stolen, then the verdict should be for the plaintiff. We cannot conceive how the defendant was prejudiced by these two instructions, which properly go together. If the defendant contracted to keep the watch in the vault of the bank, and if it was lost by reason of his failure to do so, he wa.s liable without regard to the general principles of the law of bailment. He had made a contract and he was liable for all damages resulting from his failure to perform it. If he had no right to keep the watcli in the vault, that was his affair and not the bailor’s. The contract was not to keep the watch in the vanlt if the bank permitted it, but it was absolute; and it was the pledgee’s business to see that he had authority to keep it there. If he had not, he should not have made the contract. But the instructions of the court relieved him from this liability, and, taken together, were to the effect that although he broke his contract in this regard he was still not liable unless he failed to exercise ordinary care. This was more favorable to the defendant than* the law warranted.
Judgment affirmed.