265 Mass. 8 | Mass. | 1928
This case is before us on a report from the Superior Court. The jury found for the plaintiffs in the sum of $235. The report stipulated: “if there was evidence
The defendant operated a public garage. The plaintiffs left their auto truck in the defendant’s garage for storage at a stipulated price. The truck was taken from the garage by the defendant’s son, Charlie Geas, and one Spyropoulos, to move certain furniture to the defendant’s premises. There was evidence, it was agreed, which would warrant the jury in finding “that the taking of this truck was unauthorized by the plaintiffs or was due to the negligence of the defendant’s agents in control of the said garage.” The truck was returned in about an hour after it had been taken by the defendant’s son. On the following day it was found to be damaged. A witness testified that he saw Charlie Geas driving the truck; that he was trying to turn it at a street corner “and was having quite a bit of trouble”; that “he stalled his motor”; that the witness went to the driver’s assistance and showed him the difference in the shifts; that after the driver was shown “how to shift” the witness noticed that he “ground the gears.” There was evidence that, on the day following, it was found that the clutch drum and plates were burned and three gears in the transmission were chipped off. There was also evidence that the truck was placed in the defendant’s garage three or four days before the defendant’s son removed it; that it “was in very good condition” when the defendant received it from the plaintiffs. The evidence of the defendant tended to show that when his son returned the truck the gears were not stripped.
There was evidence for the jury that the truck was in good condition when entrusted to the defendant; that it was found in a damaged condition on the day following the taking by
Judgment is to be entered for the plaintiffs in the sum of $235, with interest from March 12, 1928.
So ordered.