Brooks v. Clifton ex rel. Jordan

22 Ark. 54
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 15, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ark. 54 (Brooks v. Clifton ex rel. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Clifton ex rel. Jordan, 22 Ark. 54 (Ark. 1860).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action on the case brought by Clifton, for the use of Jordan, against Brooks, in the Ouachita Circuit Court.

The declaration contained two counts. The substance of the first was, that the plaintiff rented to the defendant a store house situated on a lot in Camden, for the express and sole purpose of storing certain furniture therein, and that the defendant, in disregard of his special contract, stored in the house certain heavy articles of freight, such as barrels of whiskey, rum, brandy, cider, stoves, castings, grindstones, plows, etc., of great weight, etc., by means whereof the store house fell down, and was destroyed, etc.

The defendant pleaded the general issue, and on the trial the following evidence was introduced, as stated in the bill of exceptions:

Win. S. Thornton, witness for plaintiff, testified that he was in the store of E. N. Woodland, & Co., when defendant came in, and said he had some furniture coming around and wanted to rent his (Jordan’s) house to put it in. A good deal of conversation followed, which witness did not recollect. Heard Jordan remark that the house was not finished, the floors were not laid. Brooks remarked that the things were light, and they would put them in the lower room, and could easily remove them to the upper room, and the rent adjusted afterwards.

On cross-examination, the defendant asked the witness if there was any contract between the parties restricting defendant to the storing of furniture alone in said house. Witness replied that he had heard nothing but furniture mentioned.

On the question being again propounded he answered, no.

Upon being asked by plaintiff, if defendant did not say he wanted the house to store furniture in, witness replied, he did.

E. N. Woodland, witness for plaintiff, testified that he came up the street with Books, and went into the store of E. N. Woodland & Co., with him. Brooks told Jordan, he wanted to rent his house to store some goods in that he had coming around on. a steam boat, and said the goods were furniture. Jordan said his house was not finished, but Brooks said the goods were light, and could be moved very easily.

On cross-examination, witness was asked if Brooks was restricted to the storing of furniture alone, and he answered, he was not, at least he heard no restriction mentioned.

The house was proven to have been worth from $1,000 to $] ,800, and the wreck was sold for $175.

Witnesses for both parties testified that the building was a fair ordinary building, but the underpining was insufficient, and there was not sufficient support. One witness stated that the plaintiff intended to make the underpining stronger. Another witness testified that in his opinion the building would not have fallen had furniture alone been stored therein.

It was proven, on behalf of plaintiff, that the building fell down in complete ruins; and that there were, at the time, stored therein some eight or nine stoves, and some 30, 40 or 50 barrels of whiskey, averaging 360 pounds to the barrel.

The witness who testified as to the number of barrels of whiskey stored, further stated that he saw Jordan at the store door in the afternoon, when the freight was in there, and asked him if he was not storing goods, and received air evasive reply. Did not hear him make any objection to storing of whiskey, or any thing else. Did not know that Jordan saw any articles hauled there.

It was also proven that it was cold weather, and that there were snow and sleet on the ground, and on the roof of the house.

Which, the bill of exceptions states, was all the evidence introduced in behalf of either party.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and ■assessed his damages at $1,000. Motions for a new trial, and in arrest of judgment were overruled, and the defendant appealed.

It will be observed that there is no evidence, whatever that Clifton, in whose name the suit was brought, was the owner of the house, or the lot on which it was situated, or had any interest in either, or that the contract for storing the furniture in the house was made with him, or by any one acting for him. On the contrary,' the evidence conduces to prove that Jordan, for whose use the suit was brought, was the owner of the house, and that the contract was made with him. The suit being brought in the name of Clifton, there should have been some evidence that the legal right of action was in him. 1 Arch. Nisi. P. 548.

One of the grounds of the motion for a new trial is, that the verdict was without evidence to sustain it, and the counsel for appellant insisted that there was no proof of a right of action in the plaintiff. We are not at liberty to overlook so fatal an omission in the evidence as set out in the bill of exceptions.

The plaintiff below asked the defendant to give the jury three instructions, the first and third of which were given against the objection of the defendant. They are as follows:

(1.) “If the jury believe from the evidence, that Jordan rented the house to Brooks for the storing of furniture, and that it was so understood between the parties at the time; and if they further believe from the testimony that the defendant stored other and heavy articles in said house, by reason whereof said house fell down and was destroyed, then the jury must find for the plaintiff in the amount of damages proven to have been sustained by him by reason of the same.

(3.) “If the jury believe from the testimony that there was a special agreement for the rent of said house for the storing of certain articles only, and defendant stored articles by reason of which said house fell down, the mere fact that Jordan knew of said defendant so storing said other articles, and failed.to express any dissent thereto, would not change the original contract of rent between the parties; and if the jury find that there was such a specific contract, and that said building was broken down by the storing of other articles, then they musk-find for the plaintiff in the sum of damages proven to have been sustained.”

The legal propositions asserted in these instructions are believed to be correct.

Most unquestionably, if Brooks rented the house for the purpose of storing furniture in it, and in violation of.'his contract stored heavy articles therein, by means of which it was destroyed, he is responsible in damages to the person having the legal right of action against him. Edwards on Bailments, 327; Hooks vs. Smith, 18 Ala. 338.

If the lessor expressly or impliedly consented to the heavy articles being stored in the house, and thereby waived the terms of the original contract, the tenant would be released from responsibility for the consequences that followed from the storing- of the heavy articles; but the mere fact that the lessor knew that the heavy articles were being stored in the house — in other words, the fact that he knew that the contract was being violated — and failed to dissent, would be no waiver of the terms of the contract.

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Related

Hooks v. Smith
18 Ala. 338 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1850)

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