47 Ky. 156 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1847
delivered tlie opinion of tile Court.
Chenowith & Co., as commission merchants at Louisville, received for sale from1 Dickinson & Shrewsberry, large quantities of salt in barrels, which they stored in their framed warehouse, situated on' an alley back of their business house, and charged for storage as well as
Chenowith & Co. clairrrto be exempt from loss on account of the abstraction of this large quantity of salt, on the ground that in the city of Louisville, the dealers in salt generally pile the barrels in open sheds or on vacant lots, or on the side walks in front of their stores, and occasionally in warehouses such as theirs; that from the weight of the barrels, the cheapness of the article, and its general safety from depridation when kept in the usual way, they must be taken to have used ordinary diligence for the safe keeping of that which had been consigned to them, and therefore, that they should not be responsible for the loss. This claim of immunity might have been entitled to great consideration, if the question had been upon their responsibility for loss by a single theft, since they could not have been required to keep a constant watch, and their warehouse might be regarded as a reasonably safe place of deposit for salt, when compared with the general manner of keeping that article. But although their warehouse might, in some respects, be deemed a safer place of deposit than the open sheds or lots or sidewalks on which salt was
We concur, therefore, with the Chancellor, in the opinion that it was incumbent upon the consignees in this case, to bestow a general supervision and care upon the salt, though deposited in their warehouse; that without such supervision there was not, even in reference to the general usage of Louisville, ordinary care or diligence in the keeping of the article; that the failure to discover the condition of their warehouse and the continuing abstraction from it of forty or fifty barrels of salt a week, for four or five weeks, or if they knew, as ■they should have known, the condition of their warehouse, the failure thereupon to repair it and to scrutinize •the condition of its contents, and to take the proper steps for prevention of further injury, is evidence of such a want of ordinary diligence, and in fact of such gross negligence as must render the consignees liable for the loss. If they had used ordinary diligence, they might, perhaps, have prevented any part of the loss, or they would, at any rate, have discovered the robbing in its earliest stages, and might thus have prevented the subsequent loss. But as they have not used ordinary diligence from the beginning to the end, but were grossly negligent, in paying no attention to their warehouse or the salt in it, they are, in our opinion, responsible for the entire loss.
Wherefore, the decree is affirmed.