138 N.Y.S. 174 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1912
The duty and liability of a bailee for hire is stated as follows in Schouler’s Bailments and Carriers-:
Section 134: “As to the measure of care and diligence required, the hirer for use is,, like all other mutual benefit bailees, bound to exercise ordinary or average care and diligence; and for nothing less than ordinary negligence, or the failure to exercise such care and diligence as persons of average prudence bestow toward such property, or upon their own property under like circumstances, is he, while confining himself to the terms of the employment, legally responsible. This in each case becomes, as in other bailments, a question of fact upon all the evidence.”
Section 135: “Inevitable accident or superior force excuses this bailee sufficiently, then, from returning the thing as it came to him; and. so with loss by accidental fire, or the natural deterioration of the thing, its wear and tear, or spoliation, from causes against whose operation he has been ordinarily careful; or in the case of a hired animal, its sickness or death under like circumstances. But where the cause of the sickness or death of the creature, or, in general, the cause of the injury, waste, or destruction of the thing bailed, is traced to the hiring bailee’s abuse or neglect of duty, or, as it is sometimes said, where his ordinary negligence contributed thereto, or was the proximate cause of the injury or loss, he must be held responsible. Similar considerations apply to the loss of hired chattels by robbery, theft, the escape of animals, and the like; the issue being, as between bailor and bailee, whether, upon the facts presented, the latter party has, or has not, exercised ordinary care in the premises.”
The adjustment of the standard of ordinary diligence in cases of bailment is not always an easy matter, and depends upon the nature of the chattel and its incidental exposure to loss or destruction. What would be considered exposure of a horse to loss by theft in a large city would not apply to a small town or village. It was not a difficult matter to untie or cut the rope holding the wheels and unfasten the1 rope to which the weight was attached. Securing the wagon and horse did not prevent them from being stolen when left alone and unguarded. It probably did make it difficult for the horse to run away, and would excuse the bailee from liability on that score, as sufficient care was exercised to guard against a runaway.
Judgment for plaintiffs for the value of the horse, $150, and for harness, $10; total, $160.