206 N.Y. 89 | NY | 1912
The action is to recover from the defendants, who were warehousemen or storagehouse keepers, the damages sustained by the plaintiff through the destruction by fire of articles of household furniture stored by them for the plaintiff and her assignor. It was a provision of the agreement for storing that the defendants should place and keep the articles in a specified room in a designated building. They, violating that agreement, placed and stored the articles in a building other than that designated, which with the articles was, without proven negligence on the part of the defendants, destroyed by a fire which did not reach the designated building. The trial court dismissed the complaint upon the ground that the proximate cause of the loss was the fire, and the defendants were not liable in the absence of proof that it occurred through their negligence.
The action is for a breach of contract. In the complaint and upon the trial the plaintiff so denominated it. The defendants violated their agreement and, therefore, are liable, at least for nominal damages. The right of *91
the plaintiff to nominal damages would not, however, in and of itself justify the reversal of the judgment. If the refusal to award them did not influence the question of costs, or the judgment would not constitute an estoppel in respect to other interests, the judgment would not be reversed merely to vindicate a barren right. (Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Durant LandImp. Co.,
The defendants as bailees were obligated to exercise such care in regard to the property as a reasonably careful owner of similar goods would exercise. The statute which so enacts (General Business Law, section
The plaintiff and her assignor were depositing their property with the defendants and a regard for its safety and security while in the keeping of the defendants was obviously within their contemplation and, it may justly be assumed, known to the defendants. For the purpose of making effective that regard, they, with the permission and concurrence of the defendants, selected the precise place of storing. Fire is an ordinary and frequent agency of destruction or injury, and safety as against it was in the contemplation of the parties when they agreed that the property should be stored in the specified room. Had the property been there stored, the plaintiff and her assignor would have assumed all the risks of injury to it except those ordinarily imposed by law upon the defendants as bailees. When, however, the property was burned in the building in which the defendants in fact placed it, *93
the consequent loss and damage was that which the parties apprehended and sought to avoid through the agreement that the property should not be there, and the defendants must indemnify the plaintiff therefor. (Milton v. Hudson River SteamboatCo.,
The order should be affirmed and judgment absolute ordered against appellant on the stipulation, with costs in all courts.
CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, etc.