National Liberty Insurance Co. of America v. Sturtevant-Jones Co.

156 N.E. 446, 116 Ohio St. 299, 116 Ohio St. (N.S.) 299, 52 A.L.R. 705, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 201, 1927 Ohio LEXIS 342
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1927
Docket19946
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 446 (National Liberty Insurance Co. of America v. Sturtevant-Jones Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Liberty Insurance Co. of America v. Sturtevant-Jones Co., 156 N.E. 446, 116 Ohio St. 299, 116 Ohio St. (N.S.) 299, 52 A.L.R. 705, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 201, 1927 Ohio LEXIS 342 (Ohio 1927).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

The sole question presented here is whether a bailee for hire may be made to respond in damages to his bailor for a breach of his contract of bailment to redeliver the subject of the' bailment to the bailor, where the subject of bailment has been destroyed and redelivery has been *302 rendered impossible by an act of tbe bailee’s servant, done by such servant solely for his own purpose and pleasure, without the knowledge of the bailee, and in violation of his orders, but while the subject of bailment, by the express order of the bailee, was in the exclusive possession of such servant for the purpose of performance of the contract ,of bailment.

The question arose in this case by the refusal of the court to give the following charge, requested by the plaintiff, in writing, before argument:

“(1) If you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant, pursuant to an agreement with Lou M. Burlingame so to do, sent its employe to Findlay, Ohio, to bring Burlingame’s said automobile from Findlay, Ohio, to defendant’s service station in Toledo, Ohio, and that defendant’s employe so sent took possession of said automobile at Findlay, Ohio, then I charge you that the possession of said automobile by said employe was the possession of the defendant, and that said employe was required to exercise ordinary care in the safe-keeping of said automobile until he had delivered same to defendant’s service station in Toledo, Ohio, and if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that said employe of said defendant did not exercise ordinary care in the safekeeping of said automobile, and by reason of said failure to exercise ordinary care in the safe-keeping of said automobile said automobile was damaged and not delivered to said Burlingame at defendant’s service station, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant the amount of damages sustained by said Burlingame.

*303 “(2) If von find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant, pursuant to an agreement with Lou M. Burlingame so to do, sent its servant to Findlay, Ohio, to bring Burlingame’s said automobile from Findlay, Ohio, to defendant’s garage in Toledo, Ohio, and that defendant’s servant so sent took possession of said automobile at Findlay, Ohio, then I charge you that the possession of said automobile by said servant was the possession of the defendant, and the defendant would be liable for its servant’s acts and conduct in the matter of the safe-keeping of the automobile until it was delivered by him to defendant’s garage in Toledo, Ohio, notwithstanding said servant for some purpose of his own may have diverted or turned aside from the direct course or route from Findlay, Ohio, to defendant’s garage in Toledo, Ohio.”

Also by exceptions to the following charge, given by the court as a part of his general charge:

“The defendant, as I have read to you, admits in its answer that at the request of Burlingame, the defendant sent to Findlay, Ohio, one of its employes, whom the evidence shows to have been a man named Grossman, to drive the Marmon automobile of Burlingame from Findlay to its garage in Toledo, and that Crossman took possession of the automobile for this purpose. The possession of the automobile by Crossman thereby became and was the possession of the defendant.

“The automobile having been thus delivered to the defendant, the defendant, as I have said, in the absence of some lawful excuse for not so doing, was bound to deliver it to the owner upon demand *304 therefor at the time and place agreed upon as shown by the evidence. And if without such excuse the defendant failed or refused to deliver the automobile to the owner upon such demand therefor, defendant by such failure or refusal would become liable to plaintiff for the reasonable market value ■of the automobile at the time of the loss thereof to the owner, Burlingame.

“The defendant, as I have read to you, from its answer, claims it was excused from delivering the automobile in question to Burlingame when demanded because its employe, Crossman, converted the automobile to uses and purposes of his own. In other words, that he did not drive the automobile to the garage of defendant, but drove and used it on his own business and pleasure and without the scope of his employment, and thus made it impossible for the defendant to deliver it to Burlingame.

“And this is a lawful excuse, if under the law and the evidence you find the facts to be in this regard as claimed by the defendant.”

The question presented here is not new. On the contrary, it has been under consideration by courts in various jurisdictions in this country and in England since an ancient date; but the difficulty arises out of the fact that the courts of the various jurisdictions, in solving the question, have arrived at widely divergent conclusions, and it is doubtful whether any useful purpose can be served by collating the authorities pro and con in other jurisdictions' and gratuitously commending the logic of the one line of decision and condemning the logic of the other line.

*305 It must be conceded that bad the bailee, in person, if a corporation can be conceived of doing anything in person, done all the things the pleadings and evidence show its servant did, and the loss had occurred in the manner it did occur, the bailee would be required to respond to the bailor in damages for the breach of his contract of bailment.

This court, in the case of Stranahan Brothers Catering Co. v. Coit, 55 Ohio St., 398, 45 N. E., 634, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.), 506, had under consideration the subject of the liability of the master for the unfaithful performance by the servant of the master’s contract, and there held:

“Where a master owes to a third person the performance of some duty, as to do or not to do a particular act, and commits the performance of the duty to a servant, the master cannot escape responsibility if the servant fails to perform it, whether such failure be accidental or willful, or whether it be the result of negligence or malice. Nor is the case altered if it appear that the malice was directed to the master.

“Where a master is under contract to deliver to the proprietor of a cheese and butter factory, pure milk, and has knowledge that the milk so delivered is to be mixed with the milk of other patrons, and intrusts the delivery to a servant who, in the course of such employment, delivers adulterated milk, the master is liable for damages necessarily and directly resulting by reason of such, delivery, and it is not a defense to show that the servant without authority and purposely, and to gratify his malice towards his employer, and with intent to injure him, adulterated the milk so delivered by *306 mixing with it water, and that the master had no knowledge of snch adulteration. In such case the rule of damages is compensation for the injury.”

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 446, 116 Ohio St. 299, 116 Ohio St. (N.S.) 299, 52 A.L.R. 705, 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 201, 1927 Ohio LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-liberty-insurance-co-of-america-v-sturtevant-jones-co-ohio-1927.