Oktibbeha County Cotton Warehouse Co. v. J. C. Page & Co.

117 So. 834, 151 Miss. 295, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 306
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1928
DocketNo. 27018.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 So. 834 (Oktibbeha County Cotton Warehouse Co. v. J. C. Page & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oktibbeha County Cotton Warehouse Co. v. J. C. Page & Co., 117 So. 834, 151 Miss. 295, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 306 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

McGowen, J.

The appellees, J. C. Page & Co., filed their declaration in the circuit court of Oktibbeha county against the appellant, Oktibbeha County Cotton Warehouse Company, seeking to- recover the value of fifty-three bales of cotton, appellees’ property, destroyed by fire in the warehouse of the appellant on the morning of September 4, 1927. The fifty-three receipts issued by the warehouse company for the fifty-three bales of cotton to J. C. Page & Co. were attached to the declaration. The declaration sought to impose liability on the appellant warehouse company for the.loss, by fire, of the fifty-three bales of cotton under and by virtue of chapter 199, Hemingway’s 1927 Code (chapter 218-, Laws of 1920), and to invoke the construction of said chapter as announced by this court in Federal Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Coleman, 143 Miss. 620, 109 So. 20.

The appellant, the warehouse company, filed a plea of the general issue, with notice that appellee’s cotton was wholly destroyed by fire without negligence on its part, and that the appellant had used such care in regard to its warehouse and all cotton stored therein as a reasonably careful owner of similar goods would have exercised with regard to cotton of his own.

It is urged' here by the appellant, as it was urged in the court below, that, because of the appellees’ failure to *297 pay, or offer to pay, for the weighing'' charges dne on their-cotton at the time of the fire, the Warehouse Receipts Act cannot he invoked, but that this case is controlled by the announcement of this court in Y. & M. V. R. Co. v. Hughes, 94 Miss. 242, 47 So. 662, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 975. This question, among others, is argued earnestly and insistently pro and con.

In the court below, the appellant, the warehouse company, asked for, and was refused, a peremptory instruction, contending there, as well as here, that no negligence was shown on the part of the appellant in the handling of this cotton, and that the proof is uncontradicted that the cotton stored was handled by the appellant company with such care in regard to the goods stored as a reasonably careful owner of similar goods (cotton) would exercise.

Without so deciding, but assuming that said chapter 199, Hemingway’s 1927 Code (chapter 218, Laws of 1920’), was complied with by the appellees, and further assuming that the appellees had the right to base their action upon said chapter, and that, the property having admittedly been destroyed by fire the warehouse company, the appellant, must show the degree of care required by said act, we are of the opinion that the appellant met the burden imposed upon it by such act.

The facts of this case necessary to state are as follows: The Oktibbeha County Cotton Warehouse Company was operating, in the city of Starkville, a warehouse in which bales of cotton were stored. On September 4, 1927, about five o ’clock in the morning, the warehouse was discovered to be on fire, and such warehouse with its contents — more than one thousand bales of cotton — was destroyed. In the evidence, it was shown that the warehouse’s walls were constructed of brick, and that its roof was of metal; that its windows were protected by metal shutters, which remained closed; that there were ventilators, properly screened, in the roof; that the cotton *298 was stored in blocks, with aisleways between; that the warehouse had been operated for a long time; that the appellant had an employee who actively weighed the cotton and kept the warehouse generally; that such employee had been in its employ for many years, and was competent and faithful; that the building was kept clean and free from loose cotton, or debris; that there was neither telephone nor electric light' connections in the building; that no oil was used therein, nor flash-lights; that there was adequate connection with the city’s water-mains ; that water barrels filled, with two buckets to each barrel, were placed at convenient points throughout the building; — in fact, no detail of protection to make the building safe from fire seems to have been omitted by the appellant, save, as insisted by the counsel for appellees, that, notwithstanding all this precaution, there was no human hand to turn the hydrant on or release the water upon fire consuming the warehouse and the property therein stored.

The main point of attack as tending to show appellant’s failure to exercise such care in regard to the cotton stored within the warehouse as a reasonably careful owner of similar goods would exercise is the fact that there was no watchman on guard at night, and that the appellant depended upon ¡the police officials of the city of Starkville for such protection.

It was shown by Joe Yeates, a colored cotton weigher, who looked after the appellant’s warehouse and issued receipts, etc., for the cotton, that he smelled; “something like cotton burning,” about noon, on the 8rd day of September, about seventeen or eighteen hours before the appellant’s warehouse was discovered burning. He said that he thought he smelled cotton burning, and that he immediately looked throughout the warehouse, and found no evidence of fire therein, but saw smoke coming from near a printing office some distance away; that he was satisfied in his own mind that the burning of debris at or *299 near this printing office was the source of the odor; that he made no report of it, because on his search of the warehouse he found no trace or evidence of fire; and that in the evening, at closing time, he went through the warehouse again, but found no trace of, or smell of, burning cotton or fire. It was shown by several white men that ;Joe Yeates, in telling about the circumstance of smelling cotton burning, on the day after the fire, gave as a reason for not reporting the circumstance that he forgot it; that he became busy, and overlooked mentioning- anything about this occurrence, and did not tell his superiors that he immediately inspected the building.

Another circumstance urged is that it was testified that some cotton caught fire, some two days prior to the fire, in a public gin not connected with this warehouse, as it was being ginned, and that this bale of cotton was stored thereafter in the warehouse, but it is not shown that the appellant .company, nor any agent thereof, knew of this controverted circumstance. Much testimony was taken in regard to what occurred at the gin. Certain it is that the gin was stopped, and that immediate search was made throughout the gin plant. No trace of fire was found, according to the employees and agents of the gin company, but witnesses testified that they saw pieces of cotton on fire. One witness testified that he put a piece of cotton, which was taken from the gin press, in a bucket of water, and’ that an employee was sent through the flue which blows the lint cotton from the gin on to the conveyor, and from there toward the press, to investigate for fire. The manager of the gin stated that there was only a small amount of cotton in the press, and that he made an examination of it. The proof shows that loose cotton burns rapidly whereas bale cotton burns very slowly.

There are no circumstances tending* to explain to us how the fire originated.

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Bluebook (online)
117 So. 834, 151 Miss. 295, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oktibbeha-county-cotton-warehouse-co-v-j-c-page-co-miss-1928.