123 Ga. 692 | Ga. | 1905
(After stating the facts.) 1. Error is assigned upon -the admission in evidence, over the defendant’s objection, of certain receipts issued to the plaintiff by .the defendant company as a warehouseman, and also five “ expense bills ” issued to him by the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, showing the-weight of the peaches. What ohjeetion was urged against the introduction of this evidence at the time it was offered does not appear, and for this reason the assignment of error can not be considered. Powell v. Railway Co., 121 Ga. 803.
2. Exception is taken to a charge of the court in which the judge submitted to the jury, as one of the contentions of the plaintiff, the question whether or not the company was negligent .in failing “to admit air into the warehouse, in view of its heated condition, in a proper. way and at proper times and periods.” The complaint made of this charge is that there was no allegation in the petition upon which the same could be predicated; the plaintiff did not in point of fact so contend, and the charge presented to the jury an additional ground of negligence in no way • claimed by the plaintiff himself. The assighment of error upon this instruction is well taken. The allegations of negligence upon which the'plaintiff based his right of recovery were, (1) that the company undertook to store his peaches in a wareroom which it knew was not suitable, because of the heat generated in the basement below and communicated to and through the warehouse ; and (2) that the peaches were piled in huge masses, sack upon sack, so that the air could not penetrate them. The plaintiff' confined himself to an effort to prove the first of these two
3. The presiding judge also submitted to the jury the question whether or not the defendant company “ was further negligent in the manner in which it stored the peaches, in that they were piled in great masses, sacks upon sacks, without any opportunity for the air to penetrate them.” As is pointed out by counsel for the plaintiff in error, there was no evidence to sustain the charge of negligence made against.the company with reference to the manner in which the sacks of peaches were piled. The testimony showed that the peaches were piled in the usual way, and several of the plaintiff’s witnesses, who professed to be experts on the subject of handling dried fruits, expressed the opinion that peaches so
4. The court was requested by the defendant’s counsel to charge the jury: “ If you believe from the evidence that the peaches stored by the plaintiff in the warehouse were injured by reason of the steam pipes running through and on the walls of said warehouse, but that said pipes were there at the time the plaintiff was storing his fruit, and if you further believe the condition of the pipes was perfectly apparent and entirely manifest to any one visiting said warehouse, then I charge you that the plaintiff is presumed in law to have acquiesced in such condition of affairs and is bound by all the consequences naturally flowing from the ordinary use of these steam pipes.” The court properly declined to give this request to charge. It was framed on the theory that the proposition therein stated would be true independently of whether Branan had ever visited the warehouse or had any opportunity to note surrounding conditions. He certainly could not be presumed to have acquiesced in the condition of affairs unless he either knew or had an opportunity to know of the presence of these pipes and the use to which they were put. Whether his opportunities for becoming acquainted with the premises were such as to charge him with notice that the pipes rendered the wareroom an unsuitable place for the storage of his fruit was peculiarly a question for the jury to determine. Furthermore, the request to charge ignored the plaintiff’s contention that the excessive temperature was caused principally by the undue heating of the floor of the wareroom by the fires maintained
The court also declined to give in charge two other written requests presented by the defendant, one to the effect that a warehouseman is not an insurer; and the other embracing an instruction that if the loss in the sale of the peaches was due, not to any depreciation in quality, but to the fact that Branan had purchased peaches in such large quantities as .to glut the market and cause a decline in the price of dried fruits, then the company could not be held accountable for such loss. These requests were substantially covered by the charge of the court.
Judgment reversed.