Armstrong v. Sisti

152 N.E. 254, 242 N.Y. 440, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 1003
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 254 (Armstrong v. Sisti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Sisti, 152 N.E. 254, 242 N.Y. 440, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 1003 (N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

On the evening of October 22, 1920, certain officers and agents of the United States government acting under a search warrant issued by a United States Commissioner, seized a large quantity of liquor and a still which they found on premises occupied by the plaintiff. The defendant was engaged in the importation and sale at wholesale of groceries and other commodities. In connection with this business he had established under government regulation a private “ Customs Bonded Warehouse ” in a small storeroom which was partitioned off from a larger room on defendant’s premises. Access to this storeroom could be gained only through the defendant’s premises and to that extent was controlled by the defendant. There was a sealed lock upon the door to the small storeroom used as a bonded warehouse *443 and the key to the lock was in the possession of United States officers. The defendant had neither means nor right to enter this small storeroom after it was locked. The morning after the liquors and still were seized and removed from plaintiff’s premises, they were deposited in this small room. The door was locked and sealed and the key retained by the government officers. On December 23, 1922, more than two years after the seizure, an order was made adjudicating that this plaintiff was entitled to the return of the seized liquor on the ground that the search warrant and the seizure under the warrant were illegal. The order provided that “ the fair value of the use of the storage warehouse of A. Sisti .& Company for the storage of the said liquors is the sum of $45.00 per month ” and adjudged that this plaintiff was liable for the payment of the “ said storage ” from the date of the seizure to the first day of July, 1922. When the storeroom was unlocked to permit the return of the liquors to the plaintiff it appeared that a large part of the liquors placed in the room was no longer there. The plaintiff has now recovered a judgment in the sum of $3,500 for damages which the jury has found he suffered from the loss of the liquors.

The complaint alleges that the officers and agents of the United States government placed the liquors in the defendant’s warehouse and that the defendant agreed to store and safely keep in his said warehouse the said personal property above described until the same should be called for by some one duly authorized to receive the said goods or until a court of competent jurisdiction should order that the said goods be returned to the plaintiff ” and that the defendant failed to return the property on demand and did not safely keep and store the said personal property but the same was lost through the defendant’s negligence in failing to take proper care thereof. The theory of the complaint and the theory upon which the case was submitted to ihe jury was that *444 the deposit of the liquors in the storeroom on defendant’s premises might be regarded as a bailment and that the defendant could be held liable to the plaintiff as bailee or warehouseman of plaintiff’s property for failure or refusal to deliver all the liquors deposited, unless he could establish a legal excuse for such refusal. Upon this appeal the defendant seeks to raise a number of interesting questions as to the correctness of various rulings at the trial and especially as to the correct measure of damages. Consideration of these questions becomes unnecessary if we decide that the plaintiff has failed to establish his cause of action.

The plaintiff has not pleaded or proved that he deposited the liquors in the defendant’s warehouse. Concededly at the time that they were placed in the storeroom they were "n the custody of the government officers. If the deposit constituted a bailment, it was a bailment by the government officers. If, as the complaint alleges, the defendant assumed by agreement the obligation to safely store and keep the property, the agreement was one made with the government officers and the complaint is entirely silent as to any agreement with the plaintiff. It is true that this court has said that “ bailment does not necessarily and always, though generally, depend upon a contractual relation. It is the element of lawful possession, however created, and duty to account for the thing as the property of another, that creates the bailment, regardless of whether such possession is based on contract in the ordinary sense ” (Foulke v. N. Y. Consolidated R. R. Co., 228 N. Y. 269, 275), and if the complaint alleges and the evidence shows breach of an obligation to this plaintiff, implied or imposed by law because of the circumstances under which the goods were deposited in the defendant’s storeroom, the complaint is probably sufficient though it fails to allege expressly agreement with or obligation to the plaintiff.

The circumstances which create a bailment may vary, *445 but obviously there can be no obligation to account for or to return property to bailor, owner or third party unless custody of the property has been relinquished by its holder and intrusted to the person claimed to be a bailee. Here, as we have pointed out, the liquor was seized by government officers; regardless of whether the seizure was legal or illegal, they had the custody of the seized property. Without an order from the court for its return the plaintiff could not obtain the property or control its disposition. The government officers placed the liquors in the defendant’s storeroom but they retained the keys. -The defendant could prevent others from entering the storeroom just as the owner of an apartment house can prevent others from entering a leased apartment and removing goods therefrom, but he himself could not enter the room and he could not admit others to it. He could not remove the goods from the room and he had no control of them while in the room. On the other hand, the government officers had right of access to the room though the defendant perhaps could by force exclude them; they could unlock the door and unless the defendant entered into a special agreement limiting their rights in this regard, they might remove the goods from the warehouse even against the defendant’s protest. Ordinarily where goods are deposited in a United States bonded warehouse the depositor of the goods divests himself completely of the custody of the goods. Upon complying with the terms of the express or implied contract of storage and upon payment of the government charges, he is entitled to their return. Until their return he has no control of them. The provisions of the United States Revised Statutes, which regulate the manner in which such warehouses may be established and maintained, serve to limit the control of the warehouseman over the warehouse and its contents to the same extent as they create right of partial control in the United States government or its officers; but control and custody is completely *446 relinquished by the depositor and is completely assumed by the warehouseman subject only to the provisions of the statutes. These provisions may be read into the contract of storage but the obligations assumed by a bonded warehousekeeper to those who deposit goods in the warehouse are the same as those of any other ware-housekeeper within the limits of control left by statute to the warehouseman. (Claflin v. Meyer, 75 N. Y. 260; Macklin v. Frazier,

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 254, 242 N.Y. 440, 1926 N.Y. LEXIS 1003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-sisti-ny-1926.