New York Fire Insurance Co. v. Kansas Milling Co.

81 So. 2d 15, 227 La. 976, 1955 La. LEXIS 1320
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 25, 1955
Docket41471
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 So. 2d 15 (New York Fire Insurance Co. v. Kansas Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Fire Insurance Co. v. Kansas Milling Co., 81 So. 2d 15, 227 La. 976, 1955 La. LEXIS 1320 (La. 1955).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

“This litigation,” said the trial judge, “arose out of the death in October, 1949 in Shreveport of an ox. Advertised as the world’s largest ox he was, surprisingly, not from Texas, but was domiciled in Oklahoma and bore the name of Oklahoma Billy.” This animal was owned by Darlene Shannon, minor daughter of L. D. Shannon, of Oklahoma, who was her qualified guardian. The ox was insured against the perils of transportation by the New York Fire Insurance Company in the principal sum of $10,000, and after its death suit was instituted in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma 1 by the guardian of the minor to recover the face amount of this policy. That court found that the ox died on October 24, 1949, as a result of injuries received in an accident which occurred in Shreveport, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, within the provisions of the insurance policy, and accordingly awarded the plaintiff Shannon $10,000. The insurance company paid this judgment and was subrogated to all the rights of the policyholder.

The insurance company as subrogee then filed the instant suit in the First Judicial District Court of the State of Louisiana for the Parish of Caddo, seeking an in solido judgment for $10,000 against the defendants Kansas Milling Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Kansas, and Wray-Dickinson Company, a Louisiana commercial partnership. Plaintiff alleged that the death of the ox was caused by negligence. After trial the district court rendered judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demands, and it appealed.

For the purpose of advertising its business defendant Kansas Milling Company obtained the gratuitous loan of the ox from the father and guardian of its owner. In order to transport the animal from Oklahoma to Shreveport, Kansas Milling Company borrowed a truck from defendant Wray-Dickinson Company. This truck was sent to Oklahoma, and there a hitch called a “fifth wheel” was installed on the truck. By means of this fifth wheel a specially built two-wheel trailer in which the ox was customarily conveyed from place to place could be coupled to the truck. Both the fifth wheel and the trailer were loaned to Kansas Milling Company by Shannon along with the ox. The animal was brought in its trailer to Louisiana, where on October 17, 1949, it was exhibited on a vacant lot in the City of Shreveport. After this exhibition had been conchtded, the ox’s two-wheel trailer was attached to the WrayDickinson truck by means of the fifth wheel, and the animal was put into the *982 trailer. The truck and trailer then started off, but they had proceeded only a very short distance 2 when they suddenly became disconnected. The front end of the trailer fell to the pavement, a distance of about four feet, and the ox was thrown violently forward. As a result of this accident the ox received injuries from which it .died a week later. 3

At the time of this accident the ox was solely in the care and custody of Kansas Milling Company. Wray-Dickinson Company had nothing to do with the handling or transportation of the ox. Accordingly the judgment of the lower court rejecting plaintiff’s demands against the defendant Wray-Dickinson Company is correct.

The law applicable to this case is found in our Civil Code in Title XII, Of Loan, Chapter 1, Of the Loan for Use, or Commodatum. Under the provisions of Article 2893 of this chapter, the loan for use “is an agreement, by which a person delivers a thing to another, to use it according to its natural destination, or according to the agreement, under the obligation on the part of the borrower, to return it after he shall have done using it”. According to Article 2898, “The borrower is bound to keep and preserve, in the best possible order, the thing lent. He can use it only in the manner for which it is fitted by its nature, or which is allowed by the agreement, under the penalty of damages”. Article 2902 further provides that, “If the thing be made worse by the effects of the use alone for which it was borrowed, and without any fault on the part of the borrower, he is not answerable for the same”.

The loan of the ox in the instant case being one for use, there was an obligation on the part of the Kansas Milling Company to return the animal to the lender. Since it was unable to do so, it is responsible to the owner for its failure unless it can show that the death of the ox was due to no fault or negligence on its part

In Nicholls v. Roland, 11 Mart., O.S., 190, this court said that the lender need only prove that he delivered the property to the borrower on the condition that it be returned, and that it then became the duty of the borrower to “give evidence which led to a fair and reasonable inference, that the loss of the property was not owing to any fault of his”.

In Alex W. Rothschild & Co., Inc., v. Lynch, 157 La. 849, 103 So. 188, this court said: “A gratuitous bailee is prima facie liable for the goods of his bailor when they cannot be produced. Where chattels delivered to a bailee are lost or cannot be returned at all, the law presumes negligence to be the cause, and casts upon the *984 bailee the burden of showing that the loss is due to other causes consistent with due care on his part. * * *”

See also Niblett v. White’s Heirs, 7 La. 253.

Consequently in the instant case the burden was on the borrower, Kansas Milling Company, to establish that the ox died through no fault or negligence on its part. It would be imposing an intolerable hardship on the lender to require of him not only to prove that he placed his property in the care of another, but also to show why he did not get it back. See Nicholls v. Roland, supra. The borrower in such a case is correctly presumed to have more knowledge than the lender of why the thing borrowed is not returned. 4 The question for decision, therefore, is: Has the borrower in the instant case, Kansas Milling Company, discharged this burden?

The evidence in this case discloses that, if a trailer is improperly connected to the fifth wheel on a truck, the truck and trailer will become disconnected. On the other han4 it is equally clear from the testimony that, when properly hooked up, the truck and trailer cannot come apart if the fifth wheel is in mechanically good condition and properly locked. In the instant case both the specially built two-wheel trailer in which the ox was transported and the fifth wheel to which this trailer was connected had been in use for some five years and had never, to the knowledge of the caretaker and keeper of the animal, become disconnected. On the day of the accident, after the employees of defendant Kansas Milling 'Company had connected the trailer to the fifth wheel on the truck, the truck and trailer moved along a very short distance and then became disconnected, permitting the front of the trailer to fall to the pavement. The employees of defendant Kansas Milling Company gave no explanation of why the trailer parted from the truck, stating that "It just became unhitched”.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 2d 15, 227 La. 976, 1955 La. LEXIS 1320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-fire-insurance-co-v-kansas-milling-co-la-1955.