Kline v. Sinton Transfer Co.

247 N.W. 215, 215 Iowa 943
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 7, 1933
DocketNo. 41747.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 215 (Kline v. Sinton Transfer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kline v. Sinton Transfer Co., 247 N.W. 215, 215 Iowa 943 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

*944 Donegan, J.

— On or about the 17th day of October, 1923, certain furniture and household goods which plaintiff claims to own were left with the defendants for storage. These goods were stored on the first floor of a building, the second floor of which was occupied by another tenant. During the month of February, 1929, it was discovered that water had leaked down from the upper floor onto the furniture and household goods, and had formed ice, so that it was necessary to chop some of the furniture and goods out. The evidence of the defendants is that on discovering their condition they removed the furniture and goods to another building where they were wiped off and spread out to dry. The goods were later returned to the plaintiff. When thus returned, the plaintiff claims the furniture and goods were in a badly damaged condition, and this action was instituted to recover the damages which he claims to have sustained.

In his petition the plaintiff states in substance that the defendant company kept a warehouse at Keokuk, Iowa, and that on the 17th day of October, 1923, the defendants agreed to store safely and keep in said warehouse certain household goods belonging to the plaintiff, of the value of $386.45; that, while in said warehouse, the defendants negligently permitted said goods to became wet, whereby they were soiled, mildewed, and greatly injured to the damage of the plaintiff, in the sum of $386.45. Defendants in their answer deny the allegations of plaintiff’s petition generally; specifically deny that the goods were stored by plaintiff; specifically deny that he was the owner of the goods; and specifically deny that defendants negligently permitted the goods to become wet, mildewed, or greatly injured. Defendants’ answer further slates that defendants exercised ordinary care in the. storing of the goods, and that, if the goods were injured in any manner, such injury or loss occurred through the operation of forces not within the control of the defendants.

Plaintiff’s petition also contained an allegation that “at the time said goods were delivered to the defendant the plaintiff in. formed him that it was. necessary for their preservation that they should be kept dry”; the plaintiff argues that this constituted a special contract, by the terms of which the defendants agreed to keep the goods dry. Whether or not this statement by itself would constitute a special contract need not be determined, because the case was not .tried on this theory. The case was tried in the district court upon the theory of defendants’ negligence, and was submitted *945 to the jury on that theory in the court’s instructions. For this reason the claim of special contract will not be given any further consideration in this opinion.

At the close of all the evidence, the defendants asked the court to direct a verdict for defendants, and, upon its refusal, asked for certain instructions and objected to certain other instructions given by the court. The cause was submitted to a jury which returned a verdict for plaintiff for $150. From this verdict and judgment thereon, defendants appeal.

I. The first assignment of error has to do with the action of the trial court in overruling the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict in favor of defendants. The grounds of defendants’ motion to direct the verdict were that there was no evidence to show any negligence on the part of the defendants, that the evidence showed that the loss of the goods occurred through the operation of forces not within the control of the defendants, and that there was no evidence introduced by the plaintiff to either disprove that the loss was caused by snow on the roof, or to make it appear that a want of ordinary care on the part of the defendants co-operated with the destroying cause.

In this connection the defendants contend that the only action pleaded by the plaintiff was on account of negligence in permitting the stored property to become wet, and that the plaintiff cannot recover in this action on account of any claim of negligence in caring for the stored property after its wet or frozen condition was discovered. This theory, however, does not seem to have been followed in the trial of the case. The defendants in examination of their own witnesses introduced evidence as to the care taken of the goods after their condition was discovered, and further evidence of these witnesses along the same line was elicited on cross-examination without any objection on the part of the defendants. The court in its second instruction told the jury that the case was one of “care of goods left in charge of a bailee.” At no place in the charge does the court limit the negligence claimed against the defendants to negligence in permitting the stored property to become wet: and at no time during the trial did the plaintiff ask the court that the negligence claimed against the defendants should be thus limited. The whole record seems to indicate that the case was tried on the theory of negligence in caring for the stored property after it was dis *946 covered that it had become wet, as well as in permitting it to become wet.

The evidence as set out in the abstract and additional abstract shows that, at the time the goods were stored in the building in which they later became wet, the room on the first floor of this building in which they were stored was dry; that, before renting it, the defendant Talbott had gone through the building, had examined it, and found that it was dry, but that he made no examination of the roof and made no examination of the upper floor to see if there were water pipes there; that there were no water pipes running through the storage room to the upper floor; that the defendant Talbott',had been told that the building was dry by the landlord; and that the defendants had no control over the portion of the building above the first floor. It further appears that, when water was discovered in the storage .room, it was dripping from the ceiling above, and that some of the stored property was frozen in two or three inches of ice. Defendants’ evidence tended to show that defendants wiped off the stored property and spread it out to dry, and that this was all that an ordinary person would have done under the circumstances. There was further evidence that some of the goods were .stored in trunks and that these trunks were not opened and the contents allowed to dry out, and that, when the stored property was taken out of the ice in which it was frozen, it was in poor shape and practically worthless.

In view of the evidence that the defendants made no examination of'the roof or upper floor, that the water was dripping from the upper floor, and had dripped in a sufficient quantity and accumulated to a sufficient depth to form ice two or three inches thick, out of which some of the stored property had. to be chopped, that the stored property was in bad shape and practically worthless when chopped out of the ice, and that the goods in trunks were not spread out or dried, we are not prepared to say, as a matter of law, that there wa's no evidence on which the jury might find the defendants •negligent.

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 215, 215 Iowa 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-sinton-transfer-co-iowa-1933.