59 Ga. App. 137 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
Bichter Brothers and others filed the present action to recover damages to a quantity of pecans (as the result of fire), which the plaintiffs had on storage with the defendant as a bailee and warehouseman. The complaint set out in detail the contract of bailment, the quantity of pecans stored, and the amount of damage resulting from the fire. It was alleged that the defendant was a warehouseman with reference to said goods and a depository for hire, and became bound for ordinary diligence in safely protecting, keeping, and redelivering said goods. In this connection it was alleged: that defendant failed to use ordinary care in keeping safely the things bailed; that while storing 500,000 pounds of pecans, worth about $100,000, defendant negligently piled the sacks of pecans eight or ten high, too close to incandescent electric lights, the pecans being full of oil and being inflammable, so that when the lights were left burning the pecans caught on fire; that while many thousand pounds of pecans of great value were on storage, defendant negligently allowed the sacks etc. to be shoved against the incandescent electric lights and their fixtures, thus loosening the incandescent lights and causing them to sag down low enough to come in contact with the bags and fire them; that while storing 500,000 pounds of pecans, worth about $100,000, defendant maintained incandescent electric lights close to the pecans which were oily and inflammable, and likely to come in contact with them, yet failed to provide said incandescent lamps with wire shields or guards to prevent each from coming in contact with the inflammable pecans; that while storing 500,000 pounds of pecans, worth $100,000, defendant maintained incandescent lamps close to the oily and inflammable pecans to make it likely that they would set fire to the same if left burning a sufficient length of time, and on the
The action, properly construed, sounds in tort founded on a breach of duty springing from a violation of the contract of bailment. Miller v. Ben H. Fletcher Co., 142 Ga. 668 (2) (83 S. E. 521); Bates v. Madison County, 32 Ga. App. 370 (3) (123 S. E. 158). Compare Fain v. Wilkerson, 22 Ga. App. 193 (2, 3) (95 S. E. 752). In such case it is necessary to set forth specific acts of negligence of the bailee in connection with the keeping and handling of the property. Stewart v. Greene, 124 Ga. 975 (53 S. E. 450); Parker Motor Co. v. Spiegal, 33 Ga. App. 795 (3) (127 S. E. 797).
' Many of the assignments of error are with reference to the trial judge’s charge in regard to the burden of proof. We shall consider
In reference to the first-mentioned meaning of the term “burden of proof,” the Code, § 38-103, provides: “The burden of proof generally lies upon the party asserting or affirming a fact and to the existence of whose case or defense the proof of such fact is essential. If a negation or negative affirmation be so essential, the proof of such negative lies on the party so affirming it.” The burden of proof is determined by the pleadings, and where a party has the burden of proof to establish a fact by the preponderance of the
Therefore, while in a case of the present character it is not error for the trial judge to charge that the burden of proof rests upon the. plaintiff to sustain his case by a preponderance of evidence (Strickland v. Davis, supra), yet since the Code, § 12-104, provides that “In all cases of bailment after proof of loss, the burden of proof is on the bailee to show proper diligence,” thus placing on the defendant the duty “of adducing evidence in rebuttal or in contradiction of that of the opposite party” (Boss v. Ed & Al Matthews Inc., 51 Ga. App. 889, 895, 181 S. E. 688), and the fact that this affirmative duty of the defendant of producing evidence of its diligence may affect the determination by the jury of the preponderance of the evidence in the case, it is reversible error for the trial judge to relieve the defendant of the duty under this section and to charge the jury in effect that the defendant was under no duty of making any defense until the plaintiff had proved all of the essential facts of its case, including negligence, by evidence. See, in this connection, Hyer v. Holmes & Co., 12 Ga. App. 837 (79 S. E. 58); Lee v. Clements, 48 Ga. 128; Dodge v. Hatchett, 118 Ga. 883 (45 S. E. 667); Richardson & Co. v. Subers, 82 Ga. 427, 430 (9 S. E. 172); Red Cross Laundry v. Tuten, 31 Ga. App. 689 (121 S. E. 865); Johnson v. Perkins, 4 Ga. App. 633 (62 S. E. 152); Hawkins v. Haynes, 71 Ga. 40 (1, 3); Hight Accessory Place v. Lam, 26 Ga. App. 163 (105 S. E. 872). We do not think that
The trial judge gave in charge to the jury Code, § 105-603, as follows: “If the plaintiff by ordinary care could have avoided the consequences to himself caused by the defendant's negligence, he is not entitled to recover. In other cases, the defendant is not relieved, although the plaintiff may in some way have contributed to the injury sustained.” We do not think that the principle stated in this section had any application under the evidence in the present case. Upon the delivery of property to a bailee and his acceptance thereof, it is his engagement that he will exercise ordinary care in its keeping and handling. A bailor is under no duty to see that the bailee fulfills his engagement in this respect, nor can it be said that a bailor who learns of the negligent handling1 of his property is negligent in failing to rescind the bailment and take possession of his property. It may be true that a bailor may be held to have assumed known dangers of the place of bailment of which he actually knew or was notified by the bailee at the time of the bailment. Wilensky v. Martin, 4 Ga. App. 187 (60 S. E. 1074). There was evidence in the present case that the plaintiff, Kichter, visited the storehouse of the defendant some two weeks before the fire. In view of this evidence we think that the charge of the trial judge was especially harmful. The plaintiff was not an expert warehouseman as was the defendant, and his presence on the premises can not be said to be any evidence, sustaining the theory of contributory negligence on his part with reference to the negligent handling of his property. Furthermore, it does not appear that he was cognizant, in fact he could not have been cognizant, of the alleged negligence of the defendant thereafter occurring with reference to the negligent stacking of the pecans in close proximity to an unguarded electric light. We do not mean to hold that a
Judgment reversed.