Barnett v. Latonia Jockey Club

60 S.W.2d 622, 249 Ky. 285, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 514
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 19, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 622 (Barnett v. Latonia Jockey Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. Latonia Jockey Club, 60 S.W.2d 622, 249 Ky. 285, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 514 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

OpiNIon op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming’.

Tlie appellant, and plaintiff below, with lier bus-band attended tbe borse races on tbe tracks of defendant, Latonia Jockey Club, in Latonia, Ky., on November 5, 1927. They drove tbeir automobile tlirougb tbe gate and into tbe grounds of tbe club, and parked it upon a space designated for sucli purpose, and, when they returned for it after tbe races were over, some articles of clothing that were contained in it were missing, and plaintiff filed this action in tbe Kenton circuit court against defendant to recover tbeir value, which she fixed in her petition at tbe sum of $1,500. A demurrer filed by defendant to .that pleading was sustained, followed by an amended petition filed by plaintiff. Thereupon defendant filed this motion: “Tbe defendant, Tbe Latonia Jockey Club, moves — 1. That tbe plaintiff be required to state what contract was made with tbe defendant with reference to tbe subject matter attempted to be pleaded by the plaintiff. 2. That tbe plaintiff be required to state bow and in what manner tbe defendant assumed control of plaintiff’s property. 3. That plaintiff be required to say who it was that assured plaintiff that tbe property was safe.” It was sustained by tbe court, but plaintiff declined and1 refused to comply therewith; whereupon tbe petition was dismissed, and, complaining thereof, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Tbe articles charged to have been lost were a mink coat of tbe alleged value of $1,000 and a traveling bag containing other wearing apparel of tbe aggregate *287 value of $500. In the original petition, plaintiff alleged, as creating the relationship between her and the defendant and tbe duties the latter assumed thereby, that she and her husband entered the grounds of the defendant upon its invitation and paid the admission fee therefor and attempted to park their automobile at a place selected by her; but the relative location of which to the clubhouse or grandstand containing seats for patrons was not stated. She then alleged that the defendant by and through its agents and servants refused to permit her to park the automobile at the spot selected by her, and directed its parking to be made on other territory allotted for that purpose. It was then charged that the loss of the articles was through the gross negligence of such agents and servants by reason of which defendant became liable to plaintiff for their value.

The amended petition elaborated somewhat on the averments of the original one, and stated that, at the time plaintiff and her husband entered the gate leading into the inclosure of the club grounds, “she paid the usual and customary admission fee to the agents and servants of the defendant, Latonia Jockey Club, and the payment of said fee was a consideration whereby the defendant assumed control of said automobile and the contents thereof, including the large traveling bag and contents thereof and mink coat belonging to plaintiff, and agreed to redeliver to plaintiff the contents, including the large traveling bag and contents thereof and mink coat, belonging to plaintiff, and the plaintiff was assured by the defendant by and through its officers, agents and servants that said automobile and the contents thereof would be safely kept by defendant, its officers, agents and servants while plaintiff was witnessing the said contests of speed between horses and would be returned to plaintiff as received from plaintiff when she would call for same,” etc. It was to the petition as so amended that the motion made by defendant, and sustained by the court was addressed.

Section 134 of the Civil Code of Practice prescribes,, among other things, that, “if the allegations of a pleading be so indefinite or uncertain that the precise nature of the claim or defense is not apparent, the court may require the pleading to be made definite and certain by-amendment, ’ ’ and which the uniform practice permits to- *288 be enforced by a motion of tbe adverse party for the pleading to be made more specific, definite, and certain. If it is well grounded, and, the court sustains it, it is the duty of the litigant whose pleading is so attacked to comply therewith, and, upon his failure to do so, to be visited with the penalty of an adverse judgment by the dismissal of his action or defense. Such a motion is not the proper practice when the pleading to which it is directed states no cause of action, but which defect may be reached by a demurrer thereto. It is applicable only to a pleading that states a canse of action or a defense, but which is done in such indefinite or uncertain terms as to not notify the adverse litigant of “the precise nature of the claim or defense,” and which we think was and is true in this case, and that the court properly sustained the motion to make the pleading more specific ; except that in the third particular contained in the motion plaintiff would not be required to furnish the name of the agent with whom the transaction was had if his name was unknown to her, but, if known, then it would be her duty to furnish it.

Plaintiff’s counsel rely for a reversal on our opinion in the case of Pennyroyal Fair Association v. Hite, 195 Ky. 732, 243 S. W. 1046. But an examination of that opinion will disclose that the case of the plaintiff therein was rested exclusively upon a special contract of bailment, based upon a specific and independent consideration for the parking of his automobile, a part of which was an express guaranty of its safe return to the bailor, who was the plaintiff in that case. In the excerpt, supra, taken from the amended petition in this case, there is no such special contract alleged. It is true that plaintiff says therein that she paid the usual and customary admission fee into the grounds of defendant, but she nowhere averred that any extra charge was made for parking the automobile in which she was riding. It is likewise true that she alleged therein that such entry fee was a consideration for the defendant assuming control of the automobile and its contents, and from which plaintiff concluded that such agents and servants agreed to redeliver the same to plaintiff on demand made by her.

The law recognizes various ports and kinds of bail-ments, imposing different degrees of responsibility on the bailee, and which are unnecessary to enumerate or *289 to discuss in this opinion, since plaintiff’s pleading, because of its uncertainty, failed to state with sufficient clarity whether or not defendant ever became related to plaintiff’s automobile and its contents in such a manner as to create the relationship of bailor and bailee. For aught that appears in her pleading, the entrance fee that she and her husband paid may have been only the regular charge for their individual entrance as patrons of the contemplated horse racing exhibition, and to have included nothing for the parking of their automobile. Neither does it appear, with any degree of certainty, as to who parked the automobile at the particular spot where it was placed; nor under what terms or conditions, if any, such parking was made.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 622, 249 Ky. 285, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-latonia-jockey-club-kyctapphigh-1933.