Hauck v. First National Bank of Highland Park

55 N.E.2d 565, 323 Ill. App. 300, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 895
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 27, 1944
DocketGen. No. 9,943
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 55 N.E.2d 565 (Hauck v. First National Bank of Highland Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hauck v. First National Bank of Highland Park, 55 N.E.2d 565, 323 Ill. App. 300, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 895 (Ill. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Walter Hauck recovered a judgment in the circuit court of Lake county against the First National Bank of Highland Park for $10,500, on account of money to that amount alleged to have been deposited in, and to have later disappeared from, a safety deposit box rented by appellee from the bank, and the cause is here by the bank’s appeal from the judgment.

The complaint charged a failure to use ordinary care and diligence to safely keep the money so deposited and stored in the safety deposit box, and permitting it to be taken therefrom without the knowledge or consent of appellee or his wife. The answer denied these allegations, and alleged ordinary care and diligence on the part of appellant at all times when the safety deposit box was in its exclusive possession and not in the possession of appellee or his wife. The issues raised by the pleadings were submitted to a jury which returned a verdict upon which the judgment was entered. The jury also answered in the negative the two following written interrogatories:

“1. Did the defendant use such care and diligence in keeping and handling the safe deposit box and contents of the Plaintiff, as was customary at the time in question on the part of other institutions fairly comparable in size and other conditions to defendant in neighboring communities of the same size as Highland Park, Illinois?
“2. Did the defendant use ordinary care and diligence in keeping and handling the safe deposit box and contents of the plaintiff?”

The grounds urged for reversal are that the trial court erred in denying appellant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict; that the verdict and the jury’s answers to the two interrogatories are against the manifest weight of the evidence, and therefore, that appellant’s alternate motion for a new trial should be granted if its claim as to the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is denied by this court.

The relation between the parties was that of bailor and bailee for hire. Appellant was not an insurer of the safety of the contents of appellee’s safety deposit box, but was required to use ordinary care and diligence in keeping the same. Ordinary care in such cases is such care as every prudent man takes of his own goods, and ordinary diligence in the preservation of such goods is such diligence as men of common prudence usually exercise about their own affairs. (Mayer v. Brensinger, 180 Ill. 110, 113; National Safe Deposit Co. v. Stead, 250 Ill. 584, 594.)

Appellee relies upon Schaefer v. Washington Safety Deposit Co., 281 Ill. 43, 51. In that case the money was deposited on one date and was missing on the next occasion when the plaintiff went to the box, and meanwhile the location of the box and its plate number had been changed. The Appellate Court held that the box holder was bound to prove some act of negligence, causing the loss of her money, which she had failed to do. In reversing that holding the Supreme Court, in its opinion, said:

“The undisputed evidence was that the box was in the exclusive control of the defendant and that the plaintiff could not obtain access to it except by signing a slip at the office and giving her key to the person in charge of the vaults. Under such conditions, we see no reason to depart from the ordinary rule that where a bailee receives property and fails to return it the presumption arises that the loss was due to his negligence, and the law imposes on him the burden of showing that" he exercised the' degree of care required by the nature of the bailment. (Cumins v. Wood, 44 Ill. 416; Sennett v. O’Brien, 37 id. 250.) To call upon the plaintiff, under such circumstances, to prove some specific act of negligence by which her money was lost, and which she must necessarily prove by defendant’s employees, would impose upon her a practically impossible burden.”

In the later case of Miles v. International Hotel Co., 289 Ill. 320, 327, the court said:

“As bailee the defendant in error was bound to exercise such care and diligence in the preservation of the property intrusted to it as every prudent man takes of his own goods of like character. Ordinary diligence means that degree of care, attention or exertion which under the circumstances a man of ordinary prudence and discretion would use in reference to the particular thing were it his own property. (Schaefer v. Safety Deposit Co., 281 Ill. 43.) The weight of modern authority holds the rule to be that where the bailor has shown that the goods were received in good condition by the bailee and were not returned to the bailor on demand the bailor has made out a case of prima facie negligence against the bailee, and the bailee must show that the loss or damage was caused without his fault. (Cumins v. Wood, 44 Ill. 416; Schaefer v. Safety Deposit Co., supra.) The effect of this rule is, not to shift the burden of proof from plaintiff to the defendant but simply the burden of proceeding. The bailor must in all instances prove that the bailee was negligent, but when she shows that the goods which she intrusted to the bailee’s care were not delivered upon demand she has made out a prima facie case or created a presumption of negligence which the bailee may overcome by offering evidence to show that it was not negligent, and if it produces such evidence, the bailor, in order to make out her case, must show that the bailee was, in fact, negligent and that its negligence caused the loss or contributed thereto. It was held' in Sanborn v. Kimball, 106 Me. 355, that the bailee has sufficiently exonerated himself from liability when he has shown that the cause of the loss was a mystery.”

A like holding as to the burden of proof is found in Roberts v. Minier, 240 Ill. App. 518. The Miles case modifies and elaborates the rule set out in the Schaefer case, and the Nebraska Supreme Court in Bohmont v. Moore, 138 Neb. 784, 295 N. W. 419, 133 A. L. R. 270, treats the Miles case as repudiating the doctrine of the Schaefer case.

As to the claim that the court erred in denying appellant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, appellee made a prima facie case by testifying that he rented a safety deposit box, in his and his wife’s name, from appellant, received two keys therefor, placed $10,500 therein on March 5, 1941, never took any of the money out, and that when he visited the box on February 3, 1942, the money-was not in the box, but had been taken therefrom without his or his wife’s knowledge or consent. On a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the question presented is whether there is any evidence, which, taken with the intendments most favorable to appellee, tends to prove the charge of the complaint. If there is in the record evidence, which, standing alone, tends to prove the material allegations of the complaint, a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should be denied, even though upon the entire record the evidence may preponderate against the plaintiff so that the verdict in his favor cannot stand when tested by a motion for a new trial. (Walaite v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 376 Ill. 59, 61, 62; Lederer v. Railway Terminal & Warehouse Co., 346 Ill. 140, 145; Knudson v. Knudson, 382 Ill. 492, 494.) The trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.E.2d 565, 323 Ill. App. 300, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauck-v-first-national-bank-of-highland-park-illappct-1944.