Hickey v. . Morrell

7 N.E. 321, 102 N.Y. 454, 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 408, 57 Sickels 454, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 863
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 7 N.E. 321 (Hickey v. . Morrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickey v. . Morrell, 7 N.E. 321, 102 N.Y. 454, 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 408, 57 Sickels 454, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 863 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Daftforth, J.

As to the character of this action the parties are agreed. It is for “ falsely and fraudulently ” and with intent to deceive and defraud the plaintiff,” representing, among other things that the defendant’s warehouse was fire-proof on the exterior,” whereby the plaintiff was’ induced to deliver to him to be stored therein, certain property of value, which while there was destroyed by fire communicated from the outside to the wooden cornice and wooden window frames ” of the warehouse and thence to the property in question.

The answer admitted that defendant was proprietor of the warehouse; that it and the articles described in the complaint were destroyed by fire, but denied the other matters above referred to as making out a cause of action, and set up that “ the property was received and stored by him as a warehouseman, and in no other capacity, and under the special contract that the *458 goods were stored at the owner’s risk of fire.” There was no controversy as to the evidence. The question was determined upon that introduced by the plaintiff and in view of the law as it stood at the time of the bailment. The appellant refers to the statute (Laws of 1871, chap. 742, § 8), “in relation to storage and other purposes”; imposing liabilities upon persons for any fire resulting from their willful and culpable negligence, and which among other things requires “the closing of iron shutters ” at the completion of the business of each day, by the occupant of the building having use or control of the same. But the complaint contains no allegation of negligence, and so the action could not stand on that ground either at common law or by statute. Another statute also referred to, relating to buildings in the city of Hew York (Laws of 1874, chap. 547, § 5), is of some importance in its bearing upon the point chiefly pressed upon us, and as likely to have been in contemplation of both parties. It is there provided that buildings of a certain description—-within which the storehouse in question comes — shall have doors and blinds and shutters made of fire-proof metal on every window and opening above the first story.” The plaintiff’s testimony went to show that she was induced to store her goods with the defendant by representations contained in a circular issued by him, the object of which, as therein stated, was to call “ the special attention of persons having valuable articles, merchandise, or other property for storage, to his new first-class storage warehouse, in the erection of which,” it said, among other things, “ no expense has been spared in supplying light, ventilation and protection against the spread of fire, the exterior being fire-proof, and the interior being divided off by heavy brick walls, iron doors, and railings appropriate and convenient in every way for the various kinds of articles to be stored.” The learned counsel for the respondent argues that the only statements of fact in the paragraph quoted, are those which relate to the interior as divided by heavy brick walls, iron doors and railings; that as to those, the defendant had knowledge, and concedes that their non-existence would make him guilty of a misrepresentation. This is a very narrow view of *459 the subject, and could prevail, if at all, only by conceding that the defendant purposely avoided mention of those things which if stated would make his solicitations less attractive, and display him as the owner of a building combustible on the outside, and so of little security to its contents, if they happened to be of the same character.

We think the appellant’s ground of complaint a just one. It was proven that in fact the window frames in the warehouse were of wood ; that at the outside of the windows there were no shutters; that the cornices were of wood covered with tin. The fire occurred in the evening. It originated in other buildings across the street, and from them communicated to the wooden window frames on the defendant’s building. An architect and a builder, examined as experts, testified that a building constructed as was the' one in question, “ with wooden window frames and sashes, and no outside shutters,” could not be deemed fire-proof, and that in October, 1881, it was practical to erect a storage warehouse which would be fire-proof on the exterior. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence she was non-suited upon the ground that the statement in the circular as to the character of the exterior of the building, was a mere expression of an opinion, and not the statement of a fact. Upon the same ground the judgment was affirmed at the General Term. In such a circular, obviously intended as an advertisement, high coloring and exaggeration as to the advantages offered, must be expected and allowed for, but when the author descends to matters of description and affirmation, no misstatement of any material fact can be permitted, except at the risk of making compensation to whomever, in reliance upon it, suffers injury. Here the allegation is that the exterior of the building is fire-proof. It necessarily refers to the quality of the material out of which it is constructed, or which forms its exposed surface. To say of any article it is fire-proof conveys no other idea than that the material out of which it is formed is incombustible. That statement, as regards certain well-known substances usually employed in the construction of buildings, while it might in some final sense be deemed the ex *460 pression of an opinion, could in practical affairs be properly regarded only as a representation of a fact. To say of a building that it is fire-proof excludes the idea that it is of wood, and necessarily implies that it is of some substance fitted for the erection of fire-proof buildings. To say of a certain portion of a building it is fire-proof suggests a comparison between that portion and other parts of the building, not so characterized, and warrants the conclusion that it is of a different material. In regard to such a matter of common knowledge, the statement is more than the expression of opinion ; no one would have any reason to suspect that any two persons could differ in regard to it. But when we look at the words accompanying this statement, viz.: “Ho expense has been spared in supplying protection against the spread of fire,” all possibility of doubt seems removed. This danger is pointed out as the one thing which, more 'than another, the owner had in view, and guarded against, and the rest of the sentence shows with what result, viz., “the exterior being fire-proof,” and the interior divided off by heavy brick walls, iron doors and railings. Thus the expenditure of money is said to have been limited only by the accomplishment of the desired object, and the statement of the material used is in connection with the representation as to the quality of the exterior. Ho one reading of inside walls and railings of incombustible material, and of an exterior fire-proof, could suppose that a precaution against fire, made necessary by statute, had been omitted, or that a builder who called attention to such matters as an inducement to patronage, could have' regarded wooden window frames as in any sense fire-proof. The language of the circular is very emphatic.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.E. 321, 102 N.Y. 454, 2 N.Y. St. Rep. 408, 57 Sickels 454, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickey-v-morrell-ny-1886.