Henderick v. Uptown Safe Deposit Co.

159 N.E.2d 58, 21 Ill. App. 2d 515
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 22, 1959
DocketGen. 47,547
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 159 N.E.2d 58 (Henderick v. Uptown Safe Deposit Co.) 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
Henderick v. Uptown Safe Deposit Co., 159 N.E.2d 58, 21 Ill. App. 2d 515 (Ill. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE FRIEND

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, who had rented a safe deposit box in the vault of defendant, Uptown Safe Deposit Company, a corporation, brought suit to recover damages for the alleged failure of defendant to keep safe $37,750 in cash alleged to have been placed in the box and to have disappeared. Trial by the court and jury resulted in a verdict for the amount claimed, and after the denial of post-trial motions, judgment was entered on the verdict, from which defendant appeals.

The complaint, as amended, alleges that the funds were not lost or misplaced by plaintiff but, through the carelessness and negligence of defendant in the maintenance and protection of her property, disappeared from the box leased for her use. Defendant’s answer denied carelessness and negligence and, by way of affirmative defense, averred that it exercised the ordinary care and diligence required of a bailee in the preservation of any and all deposited property by plaintiff when the box was in the exclusive control of defendant and not in the use of plaintiff or the corenters.

It is agreed that the relation between the parties was that of bailor and bailee. Within this relation, the depositary for hire was bound to exercise ordinary care and diligence in the preservation of plaintiff’s property. Ordinary care in such cases has been defined to be such care as prudent men take of their own property; and ordinary diligence, as men of common prudence usually exercise about their own affairs. Bauman v. National Safe Deposit Co., 124 Ill. App. 419; Mayer v. Brensinger, 180 Ill. 110; National Safe Deposit Co. v. Stead, 250 Ill. 584. The duty of exercising suck care arises from the nature of the business which the safe deposit company carries on. The obligation to discharge such duty is implied from the relation between the parties. National Safe Deposit Co. v. Stead, 250 Ill. 584. However, defendant was not an insurer of the safety of the contents of plaintiff’s deposit box. Hauck v. First Nat. Bank of Highland Park, 323 Ill. App. 300. It is fundamental that in an action based on negligence the plaintiff must not only allege but also prove actionable negligence; and while plaintiff is entitled to the most favorable inferences that can be drawn from the evidence, nevertheless, in a case of this kind, there must be some competent evidence that the money had been taken from the box without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff and the corenters, by reason of defendant’s failure to exercise ordinary care in safeguarding her property.

From evidence adduced upon the hearing, as set out in a record of almost 500 pages, it appears that plaintiff was about eighty years old at the time of trial and had been a resident of Chicago since 1893. For about thirty years she and her husband Edemond had been engaged in the business of renting furnished apartments and sleeping rooms. In November 1951 they rented jointly box No. C786 in defendant’s vault, in which they deposited, from time to time, cash proceeds from the income of their business enterprise. In August 1953 plaintiff was advised that her husband was incurably ill, and for that reason she wished to have his name taken off their box. Accordingly, on the fifteenth of that month she communicated her wishes to the officers of the safe deposit company, and, because her husband was too ill to accompany her to the vault and sign a surrender card, she was advised, in order to effectuate the change immediately, to surrender the jointly-held box and take out another box in her own name. In accordance with that advice, box No. 13 414 was assigned to her as the sole renter. She took both boxes to a booth in the vault, removed all the contents from the jointly-held box and transferred them to the newly assigned box held in her name only. She testified that at the time of this transfer she had cash accumulations in the safe deposit box of something over $89,000. Her husband died September 23, 1953, and shortly thereafter, on October fourteenth, her son Joseph Henderick and her daughter Helen Gehrke went to the office of the safe deposit company to sign a contract making them co-tenants of box No. 13 414. A week later on October 21, 1953, plaintiff and her daughter took the box to a booth and found in it $51,650, an amount which represented a loss, so they contended, of $37,750. In testifying as to the amount of $51,650 plaintiff consulted a memorandum on which her daughter had written that amount and which plaintiff took to the witness stand with her because, as she explained, she couldn’t “remember so good any more.”

Plaintiff had savings accounts totaling in excess of $40,000 and placed in five banks. Her business was conducted on a cash basis, and whenever she had more cash at home than she thought prudent, she deposited it in her safe deposit box. Evidently it was her practice to put cash in her box and then take it out from time to time to purchase bonds, generally at the Uptown National Bank. She once testified that she and Mr. Henderick counted the money in August 1953; later she stated that she could not remember when they counted it. From the record it appears that on October 21, 1953 she purchased at Uptown National Bank government bonds in the amount of $5250, $5250, and $20,000 (cost price), in which she, or she and her son or daughter, were named as owners. In the aggregate they represent a cost value of $30,500, a sum not a great deal less than the $37,750 for which plaintiff is suing. Previously, on December 24, 1952 she had purchased a government bond in the amount of $3000 in her husband’s name; on March 11, 1953 she had purchased a $525 government bond in her own name; on March 12, 1953 she had purchased a $3000 government bond, and on April 23, 1953 a $6000 government bond, both bonds in the name of herself and her husband. All these bonds were purchased at the Uptown National Bank; from the first purchase recorded here, on December 24, 1952, to the last, on October 21, 1953, her cost price investment in government bonds totaled $43,025, a total, one may note, not greatly in excess of the $37,750 for which plaintiff is suing. In February of 1954 she purchased a government bond in the amount of $11,625 at the First National Bank in Chicago.

Plaintiff and her daughter testified that there was but $51,650 in the box on Wednesday, October 21,1953, when plaintiff opened it at 11:00 a.m. Plaintiff estimated, as she testified, that $37,750 was missing, and immediately reported the alleged loss to the vault authorities.

The quarters of the Uptown Safe Deposit Company, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Uptown National Bank of Chicago, are in the building located at the southeast corner of Lawrence and Broadway. The safe deposit vault is in the basement and does not touch the outside wall of the building. At the front entrance to the vault, on the south side, there is a lobby, accessible by stairway or elevator, from the street level lobby. The banking quarters, located on the second floor of the building, have private passages from the tellers’ cages on the south side which connect with a private elevator or stairway providing direct access to the vault; on the basement level, the stairway and elevator open into a service lobby which connects, on the east, with the vault lobby.

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Bluebook (online)
159 N.E.2d 58, 21 Ill. App. 2d 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderick-v-uptown-safe-deposit-co-illappct-1959.