delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе municipal court of Chicago rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Florence E. Schaefer, for $1250 and costs against the defendant in error, the Washington Safety Deposit Company, and the Appellate Court for the First District reversed the judgment without remanding the cause. A writ of certiorari was awarded to bring the record to this court for a review of the judgment of the Appellate Court.
The defendant in error has moved to dismiss the writ for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that the judgment of the Appellate Court did not exceed $1000. The judgment of the municipal court was for more thаn $1000 and was reversed, annulled and set aside by the judgment of the Appellate Court. The question presented by the petition for a writ of certiorari was which judgment was right. The motion to dismiss the writ of error is overruled.
An Appellate Court may reverse a judgment for error of law or error of fact. If fоr error of law, which may be corrected on another trial, the cause must be remanded, but if for error of fact, where no material evidence has been wrongfully excluded, the judgment of the Appellate Court may be final, but the ultimate facts upon which the judgment rests must be found and recited in the judgment. In this case the Appellate Court in the opinion filed dealt with alleged errors of law and also made the following finding of fact: "The court finds from the evidence that plaintiff has not proven defendant to be liable in the manner and form charged in her statement of claim, and further, that plaintiff has failed to prove any actionable negligence against defendant in the matters set forth in her statement of claim.” If this was a finding of fact as to the matters in controversy, the only function of this court is to determine whether the law was properly applied to the fаcts as found.
The issue and evidence before the Appellate Court were as follows: The statement of claim by the plaintiff was for $1250 deposited in a safety deposit box rented or leased from the defendant by the plaintiff for one year, beginning January 2, 1914, for three dollars, which- box wаs under the care, control and management of the defendant, and it alleged that the money was abstracted from the box some time between January 2 and July 11, 1914, without the consent or knowledge of the plaintiff and in violation of defendant’s contract to safely keep said sum of money. The plaintiff was ruled to file a copy of her contract with the defendant, and filed a copy of a receipt for three dollars for rent of safe No. 260 in the vaults of the defendant for one year, subject, however, to the rules and conditions indorsed thereon and made a рart of the receipt and of any renewals or extensions thereto. One of nine provisions printed on the back of the receipt was the following“The liability of the company is expressly limited to the exercise of ordinary diligence to prevent the opening of the within mentiоned safe during the within mentioned term, or any extension or renewal thereof, by any person other than the renter or his duly authorized representative, and such opening shall not be inferable from the loss of any of its contents; nor shall the company be liable for permitting a deputy of the renter to have access to and remove the contents of said safe after the renter’s death or disability and before the company has knowledge of such death or disability.” The defendant filed an affidavit of merits denying the deposit of the money in the box or that it was abstractеd from the box without the consent or knowledge of the plaintiff, and affirmed that it had lived up to the terms of the contract at all times during the existence of the lease and had used ordinary care to prevent the opening of the box during the term of the lease by any other person than the plaintiff. Leave was given to file a reply to the affidavit of merits, and the reply of the plaintiff, sworn to, denied that the defendant used ordinary care and diligence to prevent the opening of the box during the term of the lease by any other person than the plaintiff.
The evidenсe for the plaintiff was that she rented the safety deposit box on January 2, 1914, paid for it and received the receipt and a key; that she deposited in the box $1250 in currency; that the box was No. 260; that the next time she went to the box was on July 11, 1914, when she signed a slip and delivered her key to the custodian; that the location of the box and the plate number had been changed and that upon opening it the contents were gone. There was testimony of her husband that he gave her the money in large bills, and of her mother and brother that she counted the money in their presence аnd put it in her hand-bag when she started for the defendant’s place of business. The evidence for the defendant consisted of testimony of the watchfulness exercised by it over the vaults, and particularly during the time that alterations and changes were being made, and the testimony of a- bank offiсer that he did not remember changing smaller bills into large ones for the husband of the plaintiff, as testified to by the husband, who said that he made the exchange and gave the money to his wife, and the officer said he would have remembered if he had made the exchange. The evidence for thе defendant tended to prove that no one but the plaintiff had'had access to the box. The Appellate Court stated that the cause of action proceeded upon the theory of the plaintiff that the defendant was presumptively liable because the money dеposited in the box in January was not there in July when she next opened the box; that such was not the presumption of law, and if it were, the presumption had been effectively rebutted by defendant’s proof; that the contract of the defendant was to use ordinary diligence to prevent the opening of the box by any person other than the plaintiff and that such opening should not be inferable from the 'loss of any of the contents of the box, and therefore the plaintiff was bound to prove some act of negligence causing the loss of her money, which she had failed to do. The opinion concluded with the statement that as the plaintiff had neither stated nor proved a case entitling her to recover, the judgment was reversed with a finding of fact. The first supposed finding of fact was that the plaintiff had not proved the defendant liable in the manner and form сharged in her statement of claim, and this was not a statement of any ultimate fact but only a conclusion of the court as to the legal liability of the defendant under the law as interpreted by the court. The second finding was that the plaintiff had failed to prove any actionable negligence against the defendant in the matters set forth in her statement of claim, and this was merely a finding that the plaintiff had failed to prove that kind or degree of negligence which in the opinion of the court would constitute a breach of the duty assumed by the defendant; that she had failed to prove such negligence as afforded cause for instituting the action and which offended against the law as applied to the relations of the parties. There being no finding of fact the Appellate Court is presumed to have found the facts the same as the trial court. (Hayes v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co.
The remaining question is whether the Appellatе Court was right in reversing the judgment for error of law, and one of the conclusions of the court was that the statement of claim failed to state any cause of action because there was no presumption of the defendant’s negligence on ac- . count of the money being lоst and because of the stipulation on the back of the receipt, and that the trial court erred in giving an instruction relating to that subject. The relation between the plaintiff and defendant was one of bailment, and the defendant, without any special contract to such effect, was bound to use ordinary care in keeping the deposit although the plaintiff, who rented the box, kept the key. (Mayer v. Brensinger, 180 Ill. no.) The duty of exercising such care arises from the nature of the business which a safety deposit company carries on, and the obligation to discharge the duty is imрlied from the relation of the parties. As bailee the defendant was bound to exercise such care and diligence in the preservation of the property entrusted to it as every prudent man takes of his own goods of like character. (Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. Scott,
The instruction criticised by the Appellate Court as incorrect was numbered 4. It purports to have been given orally but in fact was one of a series of written instructions read to the jury and was excepted to by the defendant. The instruction contained as a hypothesis of fact that the plaintiff rented from the defendant a safety deposit' box in which to keеp her money and other valuables; that she placed in the box $1250; that on returning to the box the money was not there; that she demanded that the defendant return the money; that the defendant failed to return the money, and that the plaintiff was not guilty of any negligence contributing to the loss of her money. The instruction informed the jury as the law that if those facts were found from a preponderance of the evidence they would make out a prima facie case in favor of the plaintiff, and it then devolved upon the defendant to prove that it used ordinary care and diligеnce to safely keep and return the plaintiff’s money. The undisputed evidence was that the box was in the exclusive control of the defendant and that the plaintiff could not obtain access to it except by signing a slip at the office and giving her key to the person in charge of the vaults. Under such conditions we see no reason to depart from the ordinary rule that where a bailee receives property and fails to return it the presumption arises that the loss was due to his negligence, and the law imposes on him the burden of showing that he exercised the degrеe of care required by the nature of the bailment. (Cumins v. Wood,
If the reversal by the Appellate Court was for error of law the errors were such as might have been corrected upon remanding the cause, but there was no sustainable reason, in law, for the reversal and the judgment was reversed without any finding of fact. All legitimate evidence offered was admitted by the trial court, resulting in a finding of the facts in controversy in favor of the plaintiff, and the Appellate Court did not find any of such facts different in any respect. No error of law was committed on the trial, and the Appellate Court erred in reversing the judgment. Therefore the judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the judgment of the municipal court affirmed.
Judgment of Appellate Court reversed.
Judgment of nmnicipal court affirmed.
