Isler v. F. C. Linde Co.

33 Misc. 465, 67 N.Y.S. 1072
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 33 Misc. 465 (Isler v. F. C. Linde Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Isler v. F. C. Linde Co., 33 Misc. 465, 67 N.Y.S. 1072 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Beekman, P. J.

On the 2d day of November and on the 7th day of the same month, 1894, the plaintiffs, who are straw-goods importers in this city, delivered to B. J. Dean & Co., warehouse-men, eighty-three bales of straw goods for storage, receiving from the latter at the time the usual warehouse receipts for such goods. The articles were delivered wrapped with matting, and as the proof shows, were in sound condition when delivered to B. J.Dean & Co. On the 24th day of March, 1899, the plaintiffs received from the defendant the following letter: “ The E. C. Linde Company by an amicable arrangement with Messrs. B. J. Dean & Co., took possession of all the warehouse operated by the latter, 'and will hereafter conduct the same. The supervision of this business will remain in the hands of Mr. Alvin J. Donally, one of the partners of Messrs. Dean & Company. Customers will in no way be affected by the change of ownership. Every accommodation as heretofore will be given them'. The general office of Dean & Company, at No. 302 Greenwich street, will be discontinued on and after April 1, 1899, and all business will be transacted at our general office, comer of Yariclc and Beach streets, St. John’s Park, N. Y. Central & Hudson B. B. Company’s freight terminal.” On the 18th day of April, 1899, plaintiffs received a postal card from the defendant, reading as follows: “We beg to notify you that your goods have been transferred from 390-92 Greenwich street to 387-91 Greenwich street.” No further communication took place between the parties until December, 1899, when the plaintiffs requested the defendant to return the goods above mentioned. Upon such return it was discovered by the plaintiffs that four bales were damaged to such an extent as to be practically worthless.

[467]*467Upon the close of the plaintiffs’ case the defendant rested without putting in any evidence, and thereupon moved for judgment dismissing the complaint on the ground that the plaintiffs had failed to prove a cause of action. The trial justice thereupon awarded judgment in favor of the defendant, with costs, from which judgment the plaintiffs have appealed to tins court.

Had the goods in question remained in the possession of E. J. Dean & Co. down to the time of their delivery to the plaintiffs, there would have been noi doubt of their liability for the injuries complained of; the goods having been received by them in- good order and condition, and having been returned in a damaged condition, it would have been sufficient for the plaintiffs to show these two facts to make out a prima facie case against the warehouseman, because the presumption thereupon arose that the injuries were caused through the negligence of the latter. It then becomes incumbent upon the warehouseman to- show facts and circumstances tending to rebut the presumption, and where these are shown the plaintiff must then resume his proofs and show by a preponderance of evidence that notwithstanding the explanation given by the defendant there had been actual negligence on his part, which- was the proximate cause of the injury complained of. But in the case at bar there was a change of bailees, and the claim is made on the part of the defendant that it became responsible for the care and custody of the goods' only from the time when they were delivered to the plaintiffs; that it is no more likely that the injuries complained of took place while the property was in its custody than while it was in that of E. J. Dean & Oo.; that, so far as it is concerned, the duty rested upon, the plaintiffs of showing that the -goods came into its hands in good order and condition, and that having failed in this essential element of proof, no-cause of action against it had been made out.

I think, however, that this proposition is untenable. The defendant did not receive the goods from the plaintiffs as an original bailment. It assumed to continue the storage of the goods which had been undertaken by E. J. Dean & Oo-., and without any intervention on the part of the plaintiffs it took the goods in question directly from said company, and in most unmistakable language placed itself in precisely the same situation with respect, to the plaintiffs and the articles in question as E. J. Dean & Co. would have held had there been no such change. Of course the consent [468]*468of the plaintiffs was necessary to this change, and that was at least tacitly given. But the defendant was the chief actor in the transaction, and was manifestly so desirous of relieving the plaintiffs from any trouble in the matter or any apprehension that they might in any way be placed at a disadvantage by reason of the change, that in the letter above quoted it assured them that “ Customers will in no way be affected by the change of ownership.” The defendant did not require the plaintiffs to examine their goods for the purpose of determining whether they had suffered any injury while in the bands of E. J. Dean & Co., but left them to infer that the storage was to be regarded as a continuous one, and that, prima facie, at least, the articles stored were to be considered as in the same condition as they were when received by the original bailees. I am quite satisfied that, considering the nature of this transaction, the plaintiffs, upon being notified of the assumption by the defendant of the storage contract, were under no obligation whatsoever to make any examination of their goods, and that it was sufficient for them to show, as they did, that when originally stored the articles were in good order and condition. They were then entitled to rely upon the presumption of a continuance of this condition up to and at the time when the defendant assumed control of the property, and it then.became the duty of the defendant to rebut this presumption by showing, if it could, that the injury complained of had happened while the goods were in the actual custody and control of E. J. Dean & Go. Of course, it is not claimed here, nor with propriety could it be, that the defendant would be liable for the negligent acts of the latter. The plaintiffs can succeed in this action only -on the theory that the damage in question was caused by some lack of ordinary care on the part of the defendant, so that the question under discussion relates not so much to the substantive law with respect to the duties and obligations of a warehouseman as to the sufficiency of the proof essential to make out a prima facie case against the latter.

A case quite analogous to the one in band is that of Smith v. New York Central R. R. Co., 43 Barb. 225; affd., by Court of Appeals, without opinion, 41 N. Y. 620. In that case the plaintiff proved a delivery of the property in good order to the Western Bailroad Company in Massachusetts to he transported to E. Milliman in Eochester, N. Y.; that the railroad of that company connected with the defendant’s railroad at Albany, and that [469]*469the goods were delivered, to Milliman in Bochester by defendant’s freight agent in so damaged a condition as to be entirely worthless. The trial court dismissed the complaint on the ground that it was not shown that the property in question was in good order and condition at the time when it was transferred to the defendant by the Western Bailroad Company. The judgment was reversed by the General Term, and the opinion of the court being given by Johnson, J. At page 228 the court says: “ The defendant’s counsel insists that there was no evidence to show that the property was in a sound condition when it was received by the defendant. If this is so, the nonsuit was proper.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Misc. 465, 67 N.Y.S. 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isler-v-f-c-linde-co-nyappterm-1900.