Dodwell & Co. v. Los Angeles Warehouse Co.

6 P.2d 990, 119 Cal. App. 457, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 158
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 1931
DocketDocket No. 6886.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 990 (Dodwell & Co. v. Los Angeles Warehouse Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodwell & Co. v. Los Angeles Warehouse Co., 6 P.2d 990, 119 Cal. App. 457, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 158 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

THOMPSON (IRA F.), J.

On February 17, 1925, plaintiff delivered to Los Angeles Steamship Company, at San Francisco, four cases containing thirty-four Chinese rugs consigned to plaintiff at Los Angeles. The evidence shows that Cyrus A. Hasty arranged with plaintiff for the shipment, and that the cases were to be put in a warehouse belonging to defendant upon arrival and a warehouse receipt-issued to plaintiff. The latter expected they would be so warehoused as to make it possible for Hasty to display the *459 rugs to prospective customers, and if a sale was made Hasty was to get a delivery order from plaintiff, it being understood that the rugs would be sold for cash, or if on credit it was to be subject to plaintiff’s approval of the purchaser. Hasty was to pay the storage charges, under this verbal agreement with plaintiff. Pursuant to this plan Hasty conducted the negotiations with defendant under which the warehousing was done. In some way not disclosed by the evidence, but evidently with plaintiff’s consent, in view of the fact that the goods were consigned to it and the bill of lading was its own, Hasty warehoused the goods on March 6, 1925, in accordance with his verbal agreement with plaintiff, without notice to defendant that plaintiff was the owner of the shipment. The “in sheet” of defendant shows that the rugs were received from Cyrus A. Hasty & Company. The next day, however, a warehouse receipt was issued covering the rugs and delivered to Hasty, showing that they were received' in storage by defendant “for the account of Dodwell & Company, Ltd., pledgee, Ex Cyrus A. Hasty & Co.” The rugs were stored, so that they could be displayed, in a room designated as No. 533, in which room Hasty had theretofore officed and which was in a part of the warehouse where offices were rented by various parties. In some way unknown to either plaintiff or defendant, except in one instance disclosed by the evidence, the rugs were removed by Hasty from said room prior to January 6, 1926. On the latter date the original warehouse receipt was canceled by Mr. Berbower, who was the office manager of defendant and who passed away prior to the date of trial. The evidence shows that it was mailed to Los Angeles by plaintiff on January 4, 1926. On January 6th, defendant’s general manager was told by representatives of plaintiff that the rugs had been stolen from the warehouse and sold by Hasty, and upon investigation defendant found that they had been removed. Hasty was not present at the trial and apparently was desired as a witness by both parties.

The complaint contained two counts, the first for damages for failure to deliver the goods as provided in said warehouse receipt and the second for damages for conversion of the goods stored.

Defendant in addition to a general denial of the matters alleged in the complaint, alleged as separate defenses that *460 in storing and safeguarding the rugs in question it at all times exercised such care and diligence as a reasonable and careful owner of similar goods would have exercised under the same circumstances; that in employing its servants and agents it made diligent inquiry as to their honesty and integrity, and that to the best of its knowledge during the period such rugs were so stored it had only honest and faithful employees, who carefully and prudently looked after and cared for them.

The court’s findings are very voluminous, but among them are the following: “VIII. During all the time said rugs were stored with defendant they were kept in defendant’s warehouse in a locked room, access to which could be gained only by unlocking the door thereof with a key securely kept in the possession of the defendant, and it had instructed its employees not to allow said Cyrus A. Hasty, or any person or persons other than employees of defendant, to enter said room unless accompanied by one or more of defendant’s employees. That defendant’s employees were instructed by defendant not to inspect or handle any goods stored with the defendant, except in the ordinary course of business, and defendant never, at any time, had any knowledge of any violation of any instructions; and in the storing and safeguarding of said goods defendant at all times exercised such care and diligence as a reasonable and éareful owner of similar goods would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances. IX. In employing its servants and agents, defendant at all times made diligent inquiry as to the honesty and integrity of such applicants, and, to the best of defendant’s knowledge, it had in its employ during said period from March 6, 1925, to January 6, 1926, honest and faithful employees only.”

Defendant both by its answer and in the evidence, produced by it took upon itself the burden of proving that the rugs were not taken from the warehouse by reason of its negligence, and we are of the opinion that it properly had such burden by reason of the production of the warehouse receipt introduced in evidence and the fact that defendant did not have the rugs to deliver when the receipt was surrendered to it. Such proof would seem to make a prima facie case under the first cause of action alleged, as no showing was even attempted that the deliveries were made *461 on the order of plaintiff or upon production of such receipt, which the evidence shows remained at all times in plaintiff’s possession from shortly after its issuance until it was mailed to Los Angeles on January 4, 1926.

In placing the rugs in a room where they could be displayed to prospective customers defendant carried out the arrangement made betw'een Hasty and the plaintiff. Mr. Turner, defendant’s general manager, testified that the display room was kept locked and the key to it retained in Mr. Berbower’s desk in defendant’s main office; that Hasty did not have a key to the room, and that in order to enter such room it was necessary for him “to get in touch with Mr. Berbower, who would send a man with him with a key, and they would go to the room and open it up”; that he knew of no instance when Mr. Hasty was not compelled to go through that procedure to obtain access to the room; that their instruction to employees was that no one was to be allowed in any of the buildings without one of the employees being with them; that the only keys that he knew of to the room in question were one “with the night janitor; there would be a key with the superintendent and I carry a pass key, and the original key”, and that the original key was “kept in Mr. Berbower’s desk”. The witness also testified that there was one window in the room opening upon a sheer drop of five stories; that there was no fire-escape nor any ladder or other means of gaining access to the room other than through the doors and window; that a day and night watchman were kept on duty at the warehouse; that at the time the rugs were in storage a watchman was maintained so that people could not get on to the fifth floor, where the rugs were, without the knowledge of the watchman; that during such period the first floor of the building was occupied by the Los Angeles Furniture Mart, and no one could get in or out of the building unless they had an office there and were known to the telephone operator or the manager on the first floor, or unless they came through the main office at 315 Commercial Street; that the Los Angeles Furniture Mart closed its office about 6 P.

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George v. Bekins Van & Storage Co.
205 P.2d 1037 (California Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 990, 119 Cal. App. 457, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodwell-co-v-los-angeles-warehouse-co-calctapp-1931.