245 Pa. 453 | Pa. | 1914
Opinion bt
Thé defendant engaged with the plaintiff for an annual money consideration to install and maintain in the latter’s dwelling house, on North Broad street in the. City of Philadelphia, an electrical signal apparatus known as burglar alarm, so cohstTuctM^hatTV"Wonld automatically transmit to the defendant’sWffiTe a hotice by. signal of any invasion or disturbance of door or window in the house, and that upon receipt of such signal the defendant would at once dispatch an agent to the invaded premises. So far as the evidence discloses this was the full extent of the defendant’s undertaking. During the early morning of 26th October, 1910, while this relation between plaintiff and defendant continued, and the plaintiff’s house was unoccupied by plaintiff or members of Ms household, a burglarious entrance was effected therein through a raised window, and various valuable articles amounting in The agrégate to a very considerable sum were stolen. The record shows an..ex
The result of the court’s submission of the question to the jury was a recovery by plaintiff for an act of negligence which at best was a remote cause of the loss. Admitting the facts to be as claimed by the plaintiff, the learned trial judge should have held that they did not show defendant’s negligence to have been the proximate cause of plaintiff’s loss, and he should have limited the damages recoverable to those sustained by reason of the breach of contract.
The appellee mistakenly assumes in the brief submitted that this point was otherwise decided in the former appeal reported in 240 Pa. 571, which was from a judgment sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s declaration.
For the reasons given we sustain the second assignment of error, without however limiting the plaintiff’s right of compensation to the amount paid by him for the wiring of his house as there stated. It will be for the jury, under proper instructions from the court to say what damages properly resulted from defendant’s breach of its contract.
The judgment is reversed and a venire de novo awarded.