The plaintiff brought this action to recover the value of his household goods, which were partially consumed and otherwise damaged while in the possession of the defendant as a bailee for hire. From the judgment rendered for the defendant, the plaintiff has appealed. The crucial question for determination is whether evidence which went no further than to establish that the bailed goods were destroyed or damaged by fire rebutted the presumption that the loss was due to the defendant’s negligence.
The finding, as corrected, recites the following facts: The defendant was engaged in the trucking and moving business. It was also engaged in renting storage space in a portion of a building used and advertised as a private warehouse. The building was of fireproof construction and was equipped with concrete floors and brick walls. On May 15,1948, the defendant moved the plaintiff’s household goods from his home to the warehouse for storage, the parties agreeing that the storage charge would be $5 a month. The space where the goods were stored remained under the control of the defendant.
On August 28, 1948, a fire occurred in the warehouse. As a result, a part of the plaintiff’s goods was damaged; the rest was completely destroyed. The report filed by the chief of the fire department with the state marshal, as required by law, gave the cause of the fire as “'unknown.” The report of an officer of one of the fire companies listed the cause as “spon *310 taneons combustion.” During September, 1948, the plaintiff demanded the return of his property, but, because of the fire, the defendant was unable to comply apart from turning over some of the items in a damaged condition.
The plaintiff’s attorney, at the beginning of the trial, stated to the court that he did not intend to offer any evidence in regard to the defendant’s negligence but that he proposed to rely squarely on the presumption of negligence arising from the defendant’s failure to return the goods. The court concluded that proof of the occurrence of the fire rebutted the presumption and that judgment should enter for the defendant because the plaintiff had not borne the burden of proving negligence.
The failure of a bailee to return goods delivered to him raises a presumption that their nonproduction is due to his negligence.
Dejon
v.
Smedley Co.,
On this issue there is a divergence of view among the authorities. See notes,
In the case at bar the defendant proved the existence of the fire and that, in the opinion of others, the cause was unknown or it was spontaneous combustion. This fell short of proving the actual circumstances. Had those circumstances been established, it might well be that, if the cause of the fire was spontaneous combustion, the cause behind that cause was the negligent conduct of the defendant. We hold that the court erred in concluding that proof of the fire, without further evidence, was ample to rebut the presumption of negligence.
One other matter deserves comment. Contrary to an allegation in the complaint, the court expressly found that the defendant did not operate a public warehouse within the meaning of § 6485 of the deneral Statutes. That does not mean, as the defendant
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appears to urge, that the plaintiff failed to state a good cause of action. It is, of course, true that a plaintiff may not allege one cause of action and recover on another.
Nash Engineering Co.
v.
Norwalk,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
