73 Pa. Super. 203 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
The defendant kept a boarding house in the City of Philadelphia. The plaintiff was one of her boarders. On or about August 17, 1918, the plaintiff missed from her belongings a diamond ring of the value of $140, under circumstances which, she alleged, tended to show that the ring had been feloniously taken by some person in the boarding house. On the same day she notified the defendant of the loss of the ring and the defendant thereupon orally agreed with the plaintiff that if the latter would refrain from calling in detectives, she, the defendant would reimburse the plaintiff, if the ring was not found.
The plaintiff sued the defendant in assumpsit for $140, the value of the ring, averring in her statement the foregoing facts, and in addition, that she had refrained from calling in detectives, that the ring had not been found and that defendant had refused to reimburse her. The defendant moved for judgment on the grounds, (1) that the statement set forth no legally adequate consideration for the alleged promise to the plaintiff, and (2) that the statement set forth no legal cause of action. The court below entered judgment in favor of the defendant.
The statement contains no allegation of negligence on the part of the defendant which would render her liable to the plaintiff for the loss of the ring, and no averment of any promise of reimbursement in settlement of any alleged claim for negligence. The case is, therefore, not
The judgment is affirmed.