7 Ga. App. 163 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
The suit was for the value of a piano which the defendant had transported to destination as a common carrier and had deposited in its warehouse. The proof showed that the piano was left by the plaintiff in the warehouse such a length of time after its arrival at destination as to make the railroad company liable as ordinary bailee for hire, or as warehouseman. The com
1. There was evidence that the railroad company was demanding storage charges for warehousing the piano. It was therefore a bailee for hire; and proof of the loss of the goods placed on it the burden of showing that it had exercised ordinary care and diligence in protecting them. Civil Code, §§2896, 2930. Negligence may consist in the bailee’s having left the property unguarded, where it would be exposed to a danger from hire which an ordinarily prudent person would have anticipated under all the circumstances proved. Zorn v. Hannah, 99 Ga. 634 (25 S. E. 829). Proof that other fires had recently originated in the cotton on the platform was a circumstance which the plaintiff had a right to present to the jury, in connection with the other facts, in order that the jury might determine whether the defendant’s cautionary activities had fulfilled the measure of ordinary care and diligence. Cf. Wheeler v. Albany Ry. Co., 4 Ga. App. 439 (61 S. E. 839). The court, therefore, erred in rejecting the testimony so offered;