Garrette v. Grangers Business Assn.

208 P. 1010, 58 Cal. App. 396, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 280
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 4198.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 208 P. 1010 (Garrette v. Grangers Business Assn.) 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
Garrette v. Grangers Business Assn., 208 P. 1010, 58 Cal. App. 396, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 280 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J., pro tem.

The defendant, Grangers Business Association, a corporation, was the owner of and operated a warehouse on the shores of the Carquinez Straits, at Port Costa, California. On September 15, 1919, plaintiffs deposited in said warehouse for indefinite storage a quantity of wheat. During the evening of that day a section of the wharf or dock upon which the warehouse was built collapsed, precipitating part of plaintiffs’ wheat into the water. Plaintiffs have sued defendant on its contract as a public warehouseman for the value of the lost wheat. The action was tried by the court sitting with a jury, the issue of fact being whether or not defendant was negligent as a warehouseman, in the care of said wheat. The verdict was for the defendant, and from the judgment entered on said verdict plaintiffs have appealed.

Two grounds are urged for a reversal of the judgment, namely, insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and erroneous instructions given to the jury on the question of burden of proof.

The wharf or dock upon which said warehouse rested was constructed of wooden piling and, from what may be gleaned from the testimony in the record, extended for a distance of 1,000 feet along the shore line and was 180 feet wide, the side of which projected for some distance over the water so as to give access to vessels loading and unloading grain. The cause of the accident was due to teredo boring into the piling and so weakening it that this particular section collapsed.

The claim of insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict is based upon the assertion, first, that the evidence shows that the defendant unnecessarily placed the wheat in the most dangerous part of the warehouse, and, secondly, that the evidence shows that no adequate inspection was made for teredo after it was known that the warehouse supports were infected.

*398 We are of the opinion that neither of these points are available to appellants on appeal for the reason that they relate to the precise questions of fact which were submitted to and passed upon by the jury. The main issue before the jury was the one of the negligence of the defendant. On that issue there was a conflict of proof, and the verdict of the jury in favor of the defendant was equivalent to a finding that the defendant, as a warehouseman, exercised due care in the storage of said wheat and was free from negligence. The wheat was admittedly destroyed while it was in defendant’s possession as a warehouseman, and it, therefore, became necessary for defendant to prove that, as a warehouseman, it had exercised such care in safeguarding plaintiffs’ property as a reasonable and careful owner of similar goods would exercise. This it sought to do by offering proof as to the precautions it had taken. The evidence shows that for several years previous to the accident it had maintained quite an extensive system of inspection; that every year it employed competent and experienced engineers to inspect the wharf and make necessary repairs; that for five years it had continuously employed a man to inspect the piling, and that he spent about one-half of his time underneath the wharf; that the teredo was a new enemy to the wharves in that vicinity; that they had never before been seen or known to exist in those parts until within a few weeks prior to the accident; that the wharf in question, and others in that locality, were built in fresh water, in which the teredo does not live, but that the drought in 1919 lowered the fresh water in the rivers so that the salt water from the bay extended farther inland and carried the teredo with it; that in the middle of August, 1919, it was discovered by defendant that the teredo was attacking the piles, but that they were not present in dangerous numbers and were attacking only the piles in the deepest water, which was some distance from the point where plaintiffs’ grain was placed. The evidence further shows that as soon as it was discovered that the piles in the deep water were being infected defendant gave instructions to its engineers to use the necessary means to protect the wharf and make it safe. The owners of other wharves in that locality took the same precautions, but, nevertheless, several other wharves collapsed following the *399 accident to defendant’s, all of which tended to show that the sudden attack of teredo was something that could not have been reasonably anticipated under the circumstances.

Appellants contended, before the jury, as here, that certain means of inspection other than and in addition to those adopted by defendant should have been, but were not, employed by defendant in the inspection of said piles, and evidence was offered by plaintiffs to that effect. But the jury, to whom such evidence was properly addressed, decided, in rendering its verdict in defendant’s favor, that defendant was not negligent in failing to employ such additional means of inspection, and that to have required defendant to have done so would have been to exact of defendant a higher and greater degree of care than the law demanded under the circumstances.

In actions involving the negligence of a warehouseman the usual rule applies that the facts necessary to constitute ordinary diligence or care in a given case is always a matter to be determined by the jury, in view of surrounding circumstances, where there is substantial evidence upon which to submit such an issue. It is only in the absence of such evidence that it becomes a question of law to be determined by the court. (27 Ruling Case Law, p. 1004.)

In Runhle v. Southern Pac. Milling Co., 184 Cal. 715 [16 A. L. R. 275, 195 Pac. 398], it was said by the supreme court, in effect, that it was idle to discuss, upon appeal to that court, the weight of evidence upon which the judgment rested and that it was only when the facts of a given case are not in any event or in any view of the case susceptible to the inference deduced therefrom that the question of negligence becomes one for the sole consideration of the court rather than one of fact for the determination of the jury.

Under the rules, and for the reasons above stated, we are not at liberty, we think, to interfere with the finding of the jury.

The first instruction given to the jury, following certain preliminary remarks by the court, was the following: “In all civil cases, what the law calls the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff. In other words, in all cases, in order to entitle himself to a verdict, the plaintiff must establish his case by a preponderance of the evidence. *400 Putting that as correctly as I can . . . you will proceed to consider this matter, and you will ask yourselves whether the plaintiff has established his case by a preponderance of the evidence, and if you believe him to have done so, the verdict will be in his or its favor. If, after a full consideration, you find it equally balanced, as it were—no preponderance one way or the other, just as persuasive in behalf of the plaintiff as in behalf of the defendant, it would in that ease be your duty to return a verdict in favor of defendant; as, of course, even more would it be your duty to do so if, after a full consideration of all the evidence heard here, you find that it preponderates in favor of defendant ...”

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 1010, 58 Cal. App. 396, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrette-v-grangers-business-assn-calctapp-1922.