31 W. Va. 858 | W. Va. | 1888
Action of assumpsit brought by Winfield S. Iieatherington and others, partners doing business under the name of the Belmont Coal Company, against Maurice Richter and John Fischer, partners as Richter & Co., in the Circuit Court of Wood county. The declaration contains four counts. The first avers, that on November 27, 1883, in consideration of
The defendants demurred to the declaration and to each count thereof, and the court overruled the said demurrer. Thereupon the defendants pleaded non assumpsit and filed a special plea, in which they aver, that the said flatboat Wash Gray was overloaded by the plaintiffs and was insufficient to hold the coal put into it, and by reason thereof said boat was sunk, without any fault or negligence on the part of defendants.
Issue was joined on these pleas, and the case tried by a jury, which found a verdict for the plaintiffs for $382.60, with
The defendants contend, that the Circuit Court erred in overruling their demurrer to the declaration, because neither of the four special counts are sufficient in an action upon contract. In general it is optional with the plaintiff to declare against a bailee in form ex eontraetu for the breach of the express contract entered into by him or of the promise implied from the act of bailment, or in tort for the breach of the duty, which is by law impliedly cast on the bailee ; but it seems, that in whatever form he may frame his declaration, the action is still one of contract, wherever the liability of the defendant in fact arises out of a contract. 2 Chit. Pl. 67; Maloney v. Barr, 27 W. Va. 381.
It is claimed the first count is bad, because it does not aver, that the defendants actually received the property. The bailment alleged in this count is merely a deposit,— depositum, or mandatum; that is a bailment solely for thbenefit of the bailor. Bailments of this class are commonly founded in contract aud an express undertaking. A mutual assent is always needful whether evinced bj7 words or acts; and no one can become responsible even as a gratuitous bailee, where goods are surreptitiously put in his carriage or thrust upon his person without his knowledge or consent, though, if upon ascertainment of this fact he went on with the trust, this might bind him. Story Bailm. §§ 59, 60; Schouler Bailm. § 27. The count here in question.does not specifically aver, that the boat was received by the defendants, but it does aver, that it was delivered to them, and that they promised to take care of it and return it, to the plaintiffs. This, I think, is sufficient to show an express undertaking of the trust by the defendants.
No valid objection is pointed out to the other counts, and I think they are also sufficient; therefore the court did not err in overruling the demurrer.
The second and third counts of the declaration are upon an express contract to return the coal-boat Wash Gray or pay the plaintiffs its fair value. In 2 Bl. Comm. 452, the author says : “ If a bailee undertakes specially to keep the goods safely and securely, he is bound to take the same care of them as a prudent man would take of his own; ” that is he is bound to ordinary diligence. But the contract here alleged is absolute and unconditional, that the defendants will either return the coal-boat or pay for it. The law permits a party to make any contract he pleases, and, when it is not illegal or contrary to public policy, it will be enforced according to its terms. The general rule however in the construction of special contracts of this kind, is not to expound the contract unfavorably to the bailee beyond the obvious scope of its terms. Story Bailm. § 35. The contract declared on being thus absolute and unconditional in effect makes the defendants the insurers of the boat, and, if they fail to return it they are bound to pay to the plaintiffs its value as the only escape from the duty, which they have imposed upon themselves by their contract. Schouler Bailm. § 155.
On the trial the plaintiffs offered evidence tending to prove, that about the 27th of November, 1883, they sent from their coal-works, in Belmont county Ohio to the defendants at Williamstown in this State, the coal-boat Wash Gray, loaded with 2,671 bushels of coal; that the coal-boat was towed by the tow-boat MacConnell, whose captain testified that the
The plaintiffs then offered in evidence the copy of a letter from them to defendants, which had been duly mailed to defendants; notice having been served on defendants to produce the original. The said copy is dated March 2,1883, and is as follows: “ Mess. Richter & Co.—Gentlemen : In reply to your inquiry of 28th ult., we offer you coal here on flat at 5{- per bushel, or delivered at Williamstown on flat, provided we can get boats to tow for one cent round trip ; that is, it will be 5 & \ and towing. However, we have had trouble heretofore with our flats at your place, and we propose lo stipulate that you be entirely responsible for them and not let them get aground or sunk, but have them returned in good order, in a reasonable time ; and beyond that we will charge $1.50 per day, and cost of repair, if any. Will be glad to receive your order. "Very truly yours, Belmont Coal Co.”
To the reading of this letter to the jury the defendants objected, on the ground that the same is not relevant to the matters in controversy, and because the plaintiffs did not offer to produce the letter, to which it purported to be a reply; but the court overruled the objection, and the letter was read to the jury, and the defendants excepted.
In Walson v. Moore, 1 Car. & K. 626, (47 E. C. L. 626,) the syllabus is as follows: “ It was proposed on the part of the
Where there is a contract by correspondence, the plaintiff is bound to prove it, and to do this he must introduce the entire correspondence; or, if any of the letters are lost or beyond his control, he must show this fact and then prove their contents. Brisan v. Boyd, 4 Paige 17.
In the case at bar the plaintiffs offered to read a copy of a letter written by themselves in reply to one written to them by the defendants, without attempting to show or intimating, that the defendants’ letter, to which it was a reply, had been lost. The legal presumption is, that it was in the possession of the plaintiffs, and that they refused to produce it, because it prejudiced their case. Here the plaintiffs were offering their own declarations in regard to an important matter. There was no direct evidence, that the defendants had ever received this letter. It seems to me this was a stronger case for refusing to permit this copy to go in evidence without reading to the jury the letter to which it purported to be a reply, than was the case of Walson v. Moore, supra. 1 think therefore the court, erred in permitting this copy to be read to the jury without requiring the plaintiffs also to read the letter, to which it purported to be a reply.
The plaintiffs afterwards offered to read to the jury the following letter, which it was proved had been written to them by the defendants : “ Williamstown, W. Va., March 9,1883. Belmont Coal Co.—Gentlemen : Please send us at your earliest convenience one barge (deck barge) of good coal, (lump,)
Many other exceptions were taken by the defendants during the trial both to the admission of evidence and instructions to the jury; but as the plaintiffs’ evidence showed, and it was so testified to by one of them, that their right to recover in this action for the loss of the flatboat Wash Cray was based entirely on the contract contained in the two letters aforesaid, I do not deem it necessary to consider the questions raised by said exceptions, because it is impossible to anticipate, to what extent the exclusion of said first letter or the introduction of the one, to which it purports to be a reply, will change the nature of the proceedings, both as to the evidence and the instructions which may be offered by the parties. I have in a preceding part of this opinion indicated, what I regard as the general character of this action as well as the rights of the plaintiffs and the liability of the defendants involved therein. This, it seems to me, is all that can be reasonably done to guide the parties in respect to the questions, which may arise upon any new trial, that may be had in the case.
For the error aforesaid the judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial.
REVERSED. Remanded.