Holder v. Lockwood
This text of 92 So. 2d 768 (Holder v. Lockwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
H. E. HOLDER, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
William H. LOCKWOOD, d/b/a Star Cleaners, Defendant and Third Party Plaintiff-Appellant,
Equitable Fire & Marine Insurance Company, Third Party Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*770 Ferdinand A. Cashio, Shreveport, Morgan, Baker, Skeels, Middleton & Coleman, Shreveport, for appellant.
Love & Rigby, Shreveport, for appellee.
AYRES, Judge.
This action was instituted to recover the value of a suit of clothes deposited with the defendant for cleaning and pressing and allegedly not returned and for damages for inconvenience, embarrassment and humiliation caused by the non-delivery of said suit.
The defendant, Lockwood, is the owner of and operates a dry cleaning establishment in the City of Shreveport known as Star Cleaners. The defendant caused the Equitable Fire & Marine Insurance Company to be impleaded as a third-party defendant because, on the date of the alleged loss, the Insurance Company had issued to defendant, and there was on said date in full force and effect, a bailees' customer's policy of insurance, which defendant alleged protected him against the loss claimed by plaintiff.
The defendant admitted the receipt of plaintiff's suit for the purposes alleged, as well as its value, but otherwise denied generally the allegations of plaintiff's petition. The third party defendant filed and urged an exception of no cause or right of action for the alleged reason that the policy of insurance did not afford protection or coverage for the loss purportedly sustained by plaintiff. The exception was referred to the merits and eventually overruled.
After trial on the merits, plaintiff was awarded judgment for the value of the suit of clothes against the defendant, Lockwood, who, in turn, was granted a like judgment in his favor against his insurer. From the judgment, both defendants appealed. Plaintiff neither appealed nor answered the appeals.
When clothes are deposited by a customer with a dry cleaning establishment to be dry cleaned, the relationship created between the parties is a bailment for hire. That such is the relationship is not only admitted by all parties to this litigation but is firmly established in the jurisprudence of this State. LSA-C.C. Art. 2929; Livaudais v. Lee She Tung, 197 La. 844, 2 So. 2d 232; Paterno v. Kennedy The Cleaner, Inc., 18 La.App. 649, 138 So. 531; Grush v. Boudreaux, La.App., 67 So.2d 752; Yarborough v. Bogalusa Steam Laundry, Inc., La.App., 74 So.2d 344.
The degree of care required of a bailee for hire or of a depositary is regulated by LSA-C.C. Art. 2937, providing:
"The depositary is bound to use the same diligence in preserving the deposit that he uses in preserving his own property."
In accord with this Codal provision, there is a general rule also well established in our jurisprudence that, where the relation of bailor and bailee for hire or mutual benefits exists, the bailee is under an obligation to use ordinary care and diligence in safeguarding the bailor's property, and he is answerable for such loss or injury thereto resulting from failure to exercise such care. Livaudais v. Lee She Tung, supra, and the numerous authorities therein cited; Leigh v. Johnson-Evans Motors, Inc., La.App., 75 So.2d 710; Grush v. Boudreaux, supra; Paterno v. Kennedy The Cleaner, Inc., supra.
The bailee is not only answerable for his own failure to exercise ordinary and prudent care but for the failure of those for whose acts he is responsible. For instance, it was stated in Paterno v. Kennedy *771 The Cleaner, Inc., supra [18 La.App. 649, 138 So. 532]:
"Authorities are hardly necessary to show that a bailee is liable for loss caused by the negligence of his servants while acting within the scope of their respective employments, for, under articles 176, 2317, and 2320 of the Civil Code of Louisiana, we are made responsible for the acts of our servants and others acting as our agents or employees, and if, then, a bailee is responsible for his own negligence, he is likewise responsible for the negligence of those employed by him to carry out the purposes for which the bailment was undertaken."
The law is well settled, however, that in the absence of a specific contract, a bailee for hire is not an insurer but is charged only with the duty of exercising ordinary care in safeguarding the bailor's property. Grush v. Boudreaux, supra.
"Ordinary care" is defined in 6 Am.Jur. § 249, page 354:
"As applied to bailments, ordinary care means such care as ordinarily prudent men, as a class, would exercise in caring for their own property under like circumstances, or, as it has been sometimes expressed, when applied to such bailees as make a business in keeping or transmitting property for hire, that degree of care and diligence which may reasonably be expected from ordinarily prudent persons under similar circumstances, or that which capable and reasonably prudent persons engaged in the same business, and experienced and faithful in the particular department, are accustomed to exercise when in the discharge of their duties."
The burden is upon the bailee or depositary, when the customer proves the deposit, to prove his freedom from negligence or that he used due care. For instance, it was held in Alex W. Rothschild & Co., Inc., v. Lynch, 157 La. 849, 103 So. 188, 189, that where chattels delivered to a bailee are lost or can not be returned at all, the law presumes negligence to be the cause and casts upon the bailee the burden of showing that the loss is due to other causes consistent with due care on his part. The court stated:
"The depositary is bound to use the same diligence in preserving the deposit that he uses in preserving his own property. Civ.Code, art. 2937. And, where he is unable to explain the disappearance of the deposit or to show his own freedom from negligence, he is liable. Nicholls v. Roland, 11 Mart. (O.S.) 190; Short v. Lapeyreuse, 24 La.Ann. 45."
This burden of proof on the part of defendant cleaner to exculpate himself from the presumption of negligence arising out of his inability to produce the goods deposited with him has been recognized in several cases, among which is Gugert v. New Orleans Independent Laundries, Inc., La.App., 181 So. 653, 655, wherein it was held:
"Since the defendant admits that the draperies were damaged while in its custody, the burden of proof was upon it to show that it was free from fault."
This situation is analogous to the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. In Pacific Fire Ins. Co. v. Eunice Motor Car Co., Inc., La.App., 47 So.2d 403, 404, a suit for damages to a vehicle, which was the object of the bailment, the court, citing Davis v. Teche Lines, 200 La. 1, 7 So.2d 365, 367, held that where this doctrine was applicable and specific acts of negligence are also proven, the defendant would be required not only to rebut the inference of negligence arising from the rule but to show that he was not guilty of the specific acts of negligence.
This court likewise held in Leigh v. Johnson-Evans Motors, Inc., supra, that *772
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