Huck-Gerhardt Co. v. Kendall

149 A.2d 169, 189 Pa. Super. 126
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 18, 1959
DocketAppeal, No. 153
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 149 A.2d 169 (Huck-Gerhardt Co. v. Kendall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huck-Gerhardt Co. v. Kendall, 149 A.2d 169, 189 Pa. Super. 126 (Pa. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Opinion by

Woodside, J.,

This is an appeal from a judgment entered for the plaintiff on a jury verdict after the court below had refused defendant’s motions for judgment n.o.v. and for a new trial. The action ivas brought in assumpsit by a corporate bailor to recover the value of its goods delivered to a bailee for hire and not returned to the plaintiff upon demand. The plaintiff’s goods were destroyed by fire which the jury found was caused by the defendant-bailee’s negligence.

The plaintiff alleged in its complaint, and proved at the trial, that it had delivered catalogues and folders to the defendant, who for a consideration agreed to imprint upon them according to the plaintiff’s instruction, and that notwithstanding its demands the defendant failed to return a certain specified number of them. The plaintiff offered two witnesses whose testimony was directed toward showing the quantity of the goods not returned and the nature of the relationship between the parties as a bailment for hire, issues which are not involved in this appeal.

[129]*129On cross-examination of these witnesses, counsel for the defendant asked them whether they knew there had been a fire where the plaintiff’s goods were stored, and they stated that they did. Subsequently on cross-examination, one witness testified that the plaintiff wanted to be reimbursed for that which was lost in the fire, and the other witness, when asked on cross-examination, “Did you visit that place (the defendant’s buildings which burned) and examine your stock?” replied, “Oh, after the fire — the day after the fire, and subsequently about ten days later.”

On the basis of this cross-examination the defendant moved for a compulsory nonsuit which the court properly refused.

In Moss v. Bailey Sales & Service, Inc., 385 Pa. 547, 550, 551, 553, 123 A. 2d 425 (1956), Justice [now Chief Justice] Jones speaking for the Court said, “A bailor makes out a prima facie case against his bailee for hire for the recovery of the value of unreturned bailed property by showing his delivery of it to the bailee and the latter’s failure to redeliver it upon the bailor’s due demand therefor. It then becomes the bailee’s duty, if he would escape responsibility for the loss of the bailed article, to show that his failure to redeliver it upon the termination of the bailment was because of its loss by fire, theft or other casualty free from fault on his own part. With that done, the burden of going forward with evidence to prove that the loss was due to the bailee’s negligence is then upon the bailor . . .

“In Anderson v. Murdock Storage & Transfer Company, Inc., 371 Pa. 212, 216, 217, 88 A. 2d 720, Mr. Justice Bell recognized for this court that ‘Since the [bailor] proved not only the storage of his goods and his demand for and [the bailee’s] failure to return them, but also that the goods were destroyed by a fire which occurred without any negligence on the [130]*130part of the [bailee], he cannot recover.’ See also Toole v. Miller, 375 Pa. 509, 512, 99 A. 2d 897.”

Corpus Juris Secundum (Yol. 8, Bailments, §50, p. 348) states, that “Where the bailor elects to allege or prove the circumstances of loss, instead of resting his case merely on pleading or proof of delivery and failure to return, and where the bailee’s negligence does not affirmatively appear from the evidence thus adduced by the bailor, there is no burden of proof resting on the bailee, but the bailor has the burden of going forward with evidence which will affirmatively show the bailee’s negligence.”

Here the plaintiff did not “elect to allege or prove the circumstances of the loss.” It made no reference in its amended complaint to the fact that its goods were destroyed or damaged by fire, nor did its witnesses make reference to this fact in their direct examination. The defendant cannot avoid his legal duty “to show that his failure to redeliver [the goods] upon the determination of the bailment was because of its loss by fire . . . free from fault on his own part,” by bringing out on cross-examination of the plaintiff’s witnesses that they had knowledge of a fire which destroyed or damaged the goods in question.

After the refusal of the nonsuit, the defendant testified that the plaintiff’s goods were destroyed by fire.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff’s goods were stored in the defendant’s two story brick “garage-like” 30' by 30' building located on Carlisle Street in Philadelphia. The building was used for storage of papers, and sometimes the defendant and his employe George Baldwin stored their cars in it. On the night of the fire, in April 1953, Baldwin walked in the front door of the building and upstairs. His automobile was in the building. He testified that the automobile [131]*131had no battery in it, the head was off of the engine, and that the gas gauge showed the tank empty. While moving goods stored on the second floor, some one in the street called Baldwin and said, “The place is on fire.” Baldwin could not get down the stairs, and was forced to jump from the second story to the street.

After the defendant testified, the plaintiff called Lt. Wilmer Boardman of the Philadelphia Fire Marshal’s Office. Most of the facts contained in the above paragraph were developed after Boardman testified, but as they are necessary to an understanding of Board-man’s testimony we related them first. Boardman served 15 years with the Philadelphia Fire Department, 5 in the Fire Marshal’s Office, and qualified as an expert.

He testified that he investigated the fire in which the plaintiff’s goods were destroyed, and that in his opinion the fire originated in the motor of Baldwin’s automobile as the result of a short circuit of an “undisconnected” battery igniting the gasoline in the car’s fuel pump. He stated that the automobile was “totally burned, and the motor part of the vehicle was in a very bad state of burn,” Avhich indicated to him “that the fire originated around the automobile and spread to the rest of the building.” He said that when he made his examination the day after the fire, the automobile had been pushed into the street and that the battery was in it.

FiAe times Boardman Avas asked, in slightly different language, by plaintiff’s attorney whether the fire was caused by carelessness or whether it Avas a careless practice to store or overhaul a car in a garage where paper was stored. The trial judge sustained the defendant’s objection to these questions until finally the trial judge himself asked the Avitness, “In your opinion was the fire caused by carelessness,” to which [132]*132the witness replied, “It would be careless, a careless thing to do, to work in a paper warehouse.”

On this point the trial judge charged the jury, “You have the testimony with reference to the fire and the opinion of the expert as to how this fire was started, and he said in his opinion it was due to carelessness.”

The plaintiffs case rests upon the opinions of its expert witness, first as to the cause of the fire and second as to carelessness. There was insufficient evidence of negligence to sustain the verdict without the opinion evidence of Boardman.

The opinion of Boardman concerning carelessness requires examination. The answer he gave was not responsive to the leading question of whether the fire was caused by carelessness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 A.2d 169, 189 Pa. Super. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huck-gerhardt-co-v-kendall-pasuperct-1959.