Kammerer v. Graymont Hotel Corp.

86 N.E.2d 383, 337 Ill. App. 434, 1949 Ill. App. LEXIS 287
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 10, 1949
DocketGen. No. 44,431
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 86 N.E.2d 383 (Kammerer v. Graymont Hotel Corp.) 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
Kammerer v. Graymont Hotel Corp., 86 N.E.2d 383, 337 Ill. App. 434, 1949 Ill. App. LEXIS 287 (Ill. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlah

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff was a permanent resident of defendant hotel and had been in the habit of putting money in the hotel safe, but in August or September, 1946, she noticed “new owners” at the hotel, and she testified that on September 13,1946, Mr. Weiss, one of the new owners, said to her: “Why don’t you get a safe deposit box and you can put the money in there and get it whenever you want and you won’t have to be bothering us to get it out? You will have a key and it will be perfectly safe”; that on September 21, 1946, Weiss again requested her to get a box and she then acceded to the request; that Weiss then asked Mr. Shapiro (his associate and the manager of the hotel) to get a box for her, whereupon she gave Shapiro a dollar and he gave her the key to a box. She further testified that during the months of September, October and November, 1946, she placed various sums of money in the box, which was located in the office of defendant hotel; that the amount so placed totaled $1,183.50; that when she visited the box on November 21, 1946, there was only $50 in it. A jury returned a verdict finding the issues for plaintiff and assessing her damages at $1,133.50. The trial court overruled defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and.also its motion for a new trial. Defendant appeals.

Defendant states its theory of the case as follows: “Defendant admits that the facts herein created a bailor-bailee relationship; that plaintiff by showing that she deposited certain monies in the safe deposit box and that they apparently disappeared therefrom made out a case of prima facie negligence, subject to being rebutted by defendant’s evidence tending to show due care; that after defendant introduced evidence tending to show its due care, plaintiff’s prima facie case, being based upon a presumption, disappeared, and that the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove that defendant was in fact negligent and that such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s loss of money; that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff throughout the case and the plaintiff wholly failed to maintain this burden.” “As soon as defendant introduced evidence contrary to the presumption, the presumption vanished entirely. ’ ’

In Cumins v. Wood, 44 Ill. 416, the court states (pp. 420, 421) :

“The only question of law in this record is, as to where lies the burden of proof as to the fact of negligence in an action brought by a bailor against a bailee, in whose hands the goods have suffered injury. The counsel for appellants, while admitting the authorities to be in conflict, insist that the weight of authority would throw the burden on the bailor. We held the opposite rule to be the more reasonable one in the case of Bennett v. O’Brien, 37 Ill. 250, and we are not inclined to depart from that decision. That, it is true, was a case of gratuitous bailment, but the reason of the rule applies as well to a bailment for hire. That was a case of a borrowed horse injured while in the possession of the borrower. The present suit is brought by a person who had stored furniture with the defendants at such rates of storage as the defendants asked, and which rates were paid by the plaintiff, and when the latter demanded his goods, a part of them were restored to him in a damaged condition, and the carpets were not returned at all. Now, in cases of this sort, it would be very difficult for the plaintiff to show in what way the injury and loss had; occurred, or that they had occurred by the actual negligence of the defendants, or their employees. The plaintiff would not know what persons had been engaged in the defendants’ warehouse, nor where to find the testimony necessary to support his action. On the other hand, the defendants would know, or ought;to know, what persons had had access to the goods, and could easily show that proper care had been exercised in regard to them, if such was the fact. For this reason we hold it the more reasonable rule, iohen the bailor has shown he stored the goods in good condition, and they were returned to him in a damaged state, or not returned at all, that the law should presume negligence on, the part of the bailee, and impose on him the burden of showing he has exercised such care as was required by the nature of the bailment.” (Italics ours.)

After an examination of subsequent opinions of the Supreme court that bear upon the rule laid down in the Cumins case, it is our opinion that the wholesome and necessary rule laid down in that case has never been overruled or modified by the Supreme court. It has been cited by that court with approval a number of times.

In Schaefer v. Safety Deposit Co., 281 Ill. 43, the court states (p. 51): “The undisputed evidence was that the box was in the exclusive control of the defendant and that the plaintiff could not obtain access to it except by signing a slip at the office and giving her key to the person in charge of the vaults. Under such conditions we see no reason to depart from the ordinary rule that where a bailee receives property and fails to return it the presumption arises that the loss was due to his negligence, and the law imposes on him the burden of showing that he exercised the degree of care required by the nature of the bailment. (Cumins v. Wood, 44 Ill. 416; Bennett v. O’Brien, 37 id. 250.) To call upon the plaintiff, under such circumstances, to prove some specific act of negligence by which her money was lost, and which she must necessarily prove by defendant’s employees, would impose upon her a •practically impossible burden.”

In Byalos v. Matheson, 328 Ill. 269, the court states (pp. 270, 271):

“Per Curiam: The Appellate Court for the First District having affirmed a judgment of the municipal court of Chicago granted the appellant a further appeal to this court, certifying as grounds of granting such appeal that there is a diversity of opinion among the different Appellate Courts on the following questions :

“ (1) On whom is the burden of proof where suit is brought by the bailor against the bailee for failure to return the bailed article when the defendant interposes as a defense that the goods have been lost, stolen, or destroyed by fire?

( (

“The appellee and the appellant were the only witnesses. The material facts are, that Hyman Byalos, the appellee, kept his Yelie automobile at the appellant’s garage. About seven o’clock in the evening of January 30, 1925, he left the car at the garage for the night and when he called for it the next morning it was not there. The appellant and the appellee went together to the police station to take out a warrant and reported that the car had been stolen.

‘ ‘ The appellant contends it was obligatory upon the appellee to prove the bailee was guilty of negligence, and that there was an entire failure to prove negligence. The appellee testified he left the car in the appellant’s garage at seven o’clock in the evening of January 30. He called for it next morning and it was not there. He subsequently ascertained it had been stolen. So far as the record shows, he could have had no knowledge of the circumstances of the theft. In the early case of Cumins v. Wood, 44 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.E.2d 383, 337 Ill. App. 434, 1949 Ill. App. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kammerer-v-graymont-hotel-corp-illappct-1949.