4 Wash. 634 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The undisputed facts in this case were substantially as follows: The respondent was the owner of certain docks in the city of Seattle, and was carrying on the business of a wharfinger for hire, and receiving and discharging from such docks for hire large quantities of freight.
Among other instructions to the jury, the court gave the following:
“The defendant in this case claims that by reason of the giving way of the dock in question eighty tons of shale belonging to said defendant was lost. If you should find from the evidence that the plaintiff, in the giving way of the dock, was at fault, and the defendant was without fault, then the defendant would be entitled to damages that might have been occasioned to it by such giving way of said dock; but I instruct you further that in such case the defendant can recover only such damages as the proof may show it to be entitled to. The measure of damages in such case, if any, is the actual loss sustained by the defendant. Such loss is not necessarily the value of*636 the shale; it is the difference between the value of the shale as it lay on the dock and its value after it had fallen through the dock. It is for the defendant to shov what this difference is, and, if the defendant has failed to prove such difference, then I instruct you that you cannot find in favor of the defendant for any damage whatever.”
This instruction was excepted to by appellant, and was alleged as error here. We think the instruction was erroneous, as under it the defendant could recover no damages until he had gone to the expense of recovering the shale from the bottom of the sea, and showing the damage, if any, to the shale by reason of its submersion, and also the expense of its recovery. The appellant was entitled to this shale upon the wharf. That was the place the respondent undertook to deliver it, and the proof shows conclusively that through its own negligence it failed to do so. The shale was lost to the appellant; it was never delivered at all; and the rule of damages that would apply where there is a delivery, viz., that the measure of damages is the difference between the value of the goods at the time'of the consignment and their value at the time of the delivery, cannot be applied here. This was a contract of bailment. The contract was proven, the value of the shale was proven, the loss was proven, and the negligence of the respondent was proven, and the measure of damages is the value of the shale. Jones v. Morgan, 90 N. Y. 4, 43 Am. Rep. 131; 1 Suth. Dam. p. 183. Under the admissions of the answer no demand was necessary.
For this error the judgment is reversed, and a new trial accorded the appellant.
Anders, O. J., and Stiles, Hoyt, and Scott, J. J., concur.