136 Ky. 212 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion op the Court by
— Affirming-
Offutt & Blackburn own and operate a wheat elevator at Georgetown. William J. Oarley owns and operates a flour mill there. On July 20, 1906, he stored with them 5,400 bushels of wheat in a special bin, by which it was kept separate from other wheat, and they executed to him the following writing:
|Georgetown, Ky., July 20, 1906.
“Received in store from William Carley fifty-four hundred bushels wheat, in special bin, which we will deliver to said William Carley, or order, upon presentation of this receipt properly indorsed, on payment of charges. This property is held for the owner in store at his risk as to fire or depreciation from that cause.
“5,400 bushels. .Opputt & Blackburn.
“Agreed rate of charges: One month or fraction thereof, 1 cent; 3 months, per month per bushel, 1 cent; after 3 months or fraction thereof, per mo., y2 cent.”
There was some conflict in the testimony on the final trial. The evidence for Carley tended to show that Offutt & Blackburn ■ did not give him. notice of the condition of the wheat, and that they did not exercise ordinary care in taking care of it; but the weight of the evidence shows the facts as above stated. The court instructed the jury in substance: (1) That they should find for the plaintiffs the amount of storage due them under the contract, and if it was necessary to remove the wheat from the elevator, and they gave Carley notice to remove his wheat, and he refused to remove it in a reasonable time, the jury should also allow Offutt & Blackburn the reasonable expenses they incurred in removing the wheat; (2) that if Offutt & Blackburn negligently stored or handled the wheat, so that it became infected with weevil, they should find for Carley on his counterclaim the difference between the market value of the wheat as delivered to them and as injured by the weevil; (3) that they should offset their findings under 1 and 2, and find a verdict for the party who was entitled to the difference; (4) that the plaintiffs were .bound to use such care as an ordinarily careful and prudent person engaged in the business of warehouseman would use under the circumstances, and that the failure to use such care was negligence. Under these instructions the jury found for Offutt & Blackburn, and Carley appeals.
It is insisted for appellant that Offutt & Black burn were public warehousemen; that as such they were bound to receive all grain that was tendered Ibera, and that, if Carley had taken his wheat out of
Carley’s wheat was not mixed with other wheat in the elevator. It was kept separate. When it was discovered that weevil had made its appearance in the elevator, it was incumbent on the owners to use ordinary care to eradicate the trouble -and to prevent its being communicated to Carley’s wheat; but when he allowed his wheat to remain in the elevator after they had used all the precautions they could and
The law added to the written contract the implied undertaking that they would use ordinary care in keeping it, and deliver it to him in such a condition as it would be if kept with ordinary care. The law did not make them insurers that the wheat would remain in the condition in which it was delivered to them, or that no weevil or other vermin would get into it. There is no question in this case about a limitation of their common-law liability. Their common-law liability was simply to use ordinary care in keeping the wheat. If Carley had withdrawn' his wheat from the elevator after it became infected with weevil and before it was injured, he could not have required them to receive it back from him, for he could not have required them to receive into the elevator infected wheat; and when their elevator became infected with weevil, they had the right to close it, whether they were public or private warehousemen, so as to disinfect it, for in its infected condition it was not fit to be used for the purpose for which it was intended.
Section 4794, Ky. St., only contemplates a liability for neglect on the part of the warehouseman in cases like this. Among other things that section provides: “Any warehouseman, guilty of any act of neglect the effect of which is to depreciate property stored in a warehouse under his control, shall be held responsible as at. common law.” The previous part of the section, as to notice in a daily paper if the grain becomes out of condition, only applies to grain that is not stored in a separate bin. The purpose of the advertisement is. to reach the owners of the grain; but when the grain is stored in a separate bin, and the owner is known, as in this case, this part of the section has no application.
There was no substantial error in the admission of evidence, the case was fairly submitted to the jury by the instructions, and the great weight of the tes
Judgment affirmed.