C. O. Porter MacHinery Co. v. Coleman

44 N.W.2d 845, 329 Mich. 8, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 272
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
DocketDocket 6, Calendar 44,724
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 N.W.2d 845 (C. O. Porter MacHinery Co. v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. O. Porter MacHinery Co. v. Coleman, 44 N.W.2d 845, 329 Mich. 8, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 272 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Carr, J.

The plaintiff in this case now is, and for some time past has been, engaged at Grand Rapids, Michigan, in the business of designing and manufacturing metal products. In the month of February, 1947, it contracted with defendant to move a machine from plaintiff’s principal place of business a distance of approximately 7 blocks to a location on Muskegon avenue. The machine in question is described as a Brown & Sharpe grinder. It was approximately 6 feet in height, 4 feet in length, and 4 feet in width at the base. It weighed in excess of a ton. The top of the machine was a long narrow table running across the entire front and extending over on each side, upon which certain working parts were mounted. The weight of the table was approximately 240 pounds. It was designed to slide back and forth on the base along its entire length, in a. groove about 1|* inches in depth. The range of movement was subject to control by the use of so-called locks or'metal stops, but it was held in position on the machine solely by its own weight.

At the time in question defendant was engaged in the business of handling and moving heavy machinery. He had on prior occasions moved equipment for the plaintiff. In the carrying on of such work he had experience and skill. Following a request from plaintiff to move the Brown & Sharpe grinder, defendant went to plaintiff’s place of business and his *11 attention was called to the machine. Apparently, however, he did not make an examination of it. It was his claim on the trial that he was told by plaintiff’s employees that it was ready to be moved. Thereafter defendant sent 2 of his employees with a truck to transport the grinder to the location on Muskegon avenue. The grinder was removed from skids where it was located, placed on the truck, and defendant’s employees departed with it. A short time later defendant called plaintiff and advised one of its foremen that the table on the top of the grinder had vibrated off the top of the machine to the bed of the truck while being transported, and then had bounced from the truck to the street. This information was, it appears, based on a report made to defendant by one of his employees. As a result the table was seriously damaged. On the trial of the case defendant did not question the accuracy of the information given to him. In advising plaintiff as to the occurrence he assumed that the damage to plaintiff’s equipment happened in the manner stated.

Plaintiff instituted the present action to recover the cost of repairing its machine, giving credit to defendant for the sum of $76.75 which was the amount of his bill for moving the grinder. It is not disputed that the total cost of the necessary repair work was $987.91. Plaintiff sought judgment for the difference between that amount and defendant’s bill, or $911.16, on the theory that defendant was guilty of negligence in not exercising proper precautions to prevent the table slipping from the base of the machine while it was being transported in his truck.

The case was heard before the court without a jury. The trial judge came to the conclusion, after listening to the testimony and the arguments of counsel, that plaintiff had failed to show negligence on the part of defendant or his employees, and that *12 the injury to the equipment occurred because of the failure on the part of plaintiff to properly prepare the grinder for removal to the Muskegon avenue location. From the judgment entered plaintiff has appealed, claiming that the trial judge was in error in his findings and that it was entitled to judgment on the basis of undisputed testimony in the case.

The machine in question was purchased by plaintiff approximately 4 months before it was damaged, and was transported from Detroit to Grand Rapids by truck. When received, the table was secured to the base by steel bands approximately 3/4 of an inch wide. These bands were removed by plaintiff’s employees, and the machine, while not operated in plaintiff’s main plant, was gone over by its employees in order to insure that it would be in operating condition when necessity for its use arose. The steel bands were not replaced. The opinion of the trial judge indicates that he considered that plaintiff was negligent in not preparing it for transportation by defendant by restoring it to the condition in which it was when moved from Detroit to Grand Rapids. The testimony in the case does not justify such conclusion. The defendant, admittedly skilled in the moving of such machinery, testified that the use of the bands was not necessary and that such bands were designed for protection of a more permanent nature than was required in the instant case. He stated further than an ordinary wire, approximately 1/16 of an inch in diameter, would have been sufficient to secure the table, and that if he had known that the table could be lifted from the base, he would have caused it to be wired. He claimed in substance that, although he had previously seen a number of Brown & Sharpe grinders, he did not know that the table was ’ held in place merely by its own weight. It is a fair inference from the testimony that, as *13 before noted, he did not personally make an inspection or examination of the plaintiff’s machine.

Plaintiff’s witness Sanzi, a shop foreman, testified that he was present when defendant’s employees came to plaintiff’s plant to remove the grinder, that he said to them at the time that the table might fall off and that they “should be careful about it,” and .that in substance, as the witness recalled, the reply was made that “We will take care of that.” This testimony was corroborated by another witness, also an employee of plaintiff, who testified that Sanzi said in substance, “Watch the top of the machine; it’s loose,” and that defendant’s employees answered in effect-that they knew about it. The testimony of these 2 witnesses was not disputed on the trial. Defendant testified in his own behalf but did not call other witnesses. It thus appears from the record that the employees entrusted by the defendant with the duty of transporting the grinder were specifically informed that the table was loose and that precautions should be taken to prevent its slipping from the base. Defendant through his employees accepted the machine for transportation, charged with notice of its condition.

It is the claim of the plaintiff that it relied on the special skill and experience of the defendant as a mover of heavy equipment, and that, as in prior transactions between the parties, it had assumed that he would take proper precautions to safeguard against damage resulting from the ordinary hazards of the method of transportation employed. It is conceded that the contractual relation between the parties created a bailment. Defendant was hot an insurer of the safety of the bailed property. It was, however, his duty, as stated in Berry v. Cadillac Storage Co., 259 Mich 104, 109, “to bestow upon the goods included in the contract that degree of care *14 which their ¡mown nature and instrinsic value demanded.” See, also, 8 CJS, p 281, where it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W.2d 845, 329 Mich. 8, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-o-porter-machinery-co-v-coleman-mich-1950.