Richter Bros. v. Atlantic Co.

200 S.E. 462, 59 Ga. App. 137, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
Docket27031
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 200 S.E. 462 (Richter Bros. v. Atlantic Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richter Bros. v. Atlantic Co., 200 S.E. 462, 59 Ga. App. 137, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 458 (Ga. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

MacIntyre, J.

Bichter Brothers and others filed the present action to recover damages to a quantity of pecans (as the result of fire), which the plaintiffs had on storage with the defendant as a bailee and warehouseman. The complaint set out in detail the contract of bailment, the quantity of pecans stored, and the amount of damage resulting from the fire. It was alleged that the defendant was a warehouseman with reference to said goods and a depository for hire, and became bound for ordinary diligence in safely protecting, keeping, and redelivering said goods. In this connection it was alleged: that defendant failed to use ordinary care in keeping safely the things bailed; that while storing 500,000 pounds of pecans, worth about $100,000, defendant negligently piled the sacks of pecans eight or ten high, too close to incandescent electric lights, the pecans being full of oil and being inflammable, so that when the lights were left burning the pecans caught on fire; that while many thousand pounds of pecans of great value were on storage, defendant negligently allowed the sacks etc. to be shoved against the incandescent electric lights and their fixtures, thus loosening the incandescent lights and causing them to sag down low enough to come in contact with the bags and fire them; that while storing 500,000 pounds of pecans, worth about $100,000, defendant maintained incandescent electric lights close to the pecans which were oily and inflammable, and likely to come in contact with them, yet failed to provide said incandescent lamps with wire shields or guards to prevent each from coming in contact with the inflammable pecans; that while storing 500,000 pounds of pecans, worth $100,000, defendant maintained incandescent lamps close to the oily and inflammable pecans to make it likely that they would set fire to the same if left burning a sufficient length of time, and on the [139]*139night of the fire they were negligently left burning such length of time and did set fire to the pecans; that defendant negligently failed to have a watchman inspect said pecans in each store-room at least once each hour of the day and night, to discover and put out fires; that with so valuable an amount of pecans on hand of such inflammable nature, defendant should have had a sprinkler system to guard against fire, and failed to do so; that with 500,000 pounds of pecans of the value of $100,000 on hand, defendant had them stored in three separate compartments; separated by brick walls, with six-foot openings between, and no doors in said openings to hermetically seal them and prevent noxious gases going from one compartment to the other, so that when a small fire broke out in the southernmost compartment and smouldered for several hours the heat distilled the nuts, driving off noxious gases and vaporized oil, which went to where plaintiffs’ pecans were stored in the northernmost compartment, said gases penetrating the hulls of the pecans and rendering them unfit for human consumption, and this would have been prevented by hermetically sealed doors; that with such valuable and inflammable pecans on hand defendant negligently failed to provide but one entrance and exit by elevator, so that fire fighters could not control the fire, and had to break through the ceiling, with the result that the fire in the southernmost compartment smouldered six additional hours after it was discovered, thereby greatly adding to the damage of plaintiffs’ pecans in the northernmost compartment; that defendant realizing the fearful danger of fire on account of the close proximity of the incandescent lights to the highly inflammable pecans, instead of refusing to receive and store additional pecans in its overcrowded warehouse, and instead of providing lights with wire guards or shields to make it impossible for them to touch the pecans, and instead of removing the light globes entirely, did negligently adopt the silly expedient of partially unscrewing out of their sockets some of the light globes, which were thus endangering the contents of the warehouse, in order to prevent said lights burning so close to the piled-up pecans, and ordinary diligence required that defendant should know that such expedient was insufficient to guard against .the danger, and that a slight jar, or increased current, or other thing, would likely start to burning again such lights thus partially unscrewed from their sockets; that defendant’s warehouse was origi[140]*140nally equipped with three pilot lights at the elevator (one on the circuit of lights for each room), so that one looking up the elevator shaft could tell by the pilot light whether any of the electric lights in any room were burning, but for some months before the time of the lire said defendant had negligently failed to replace the burned-out or destroyed pilot lights at the elevator, so that none of them could give warning to persons looking up the elevator shaft that the lights were burning in the room where plaintiff’s pecans were stored, and if said pilot lights had been operating on the night of the fire, the fact that the lights were burning would have been discovered in time to prevent injury to plaintiff’s pecans; that defendant negligently piled inflammable sacks of pecans eight or ten sacks high, near the ceiling, close to and above the incandescent electric lights which hung down fifteen or eighteen inches from the ceiling, and especially about two or three days before the fire, at the point on the fourth floor where the fire later started, did negligently pile such sacks in a manner other than directly and solidly above each other with the weight distributed evenly, with the result that said sacks were piled in a state of unstable equilibrium, so that they were likely to, and did, shift their position, with the result that the sacks closest to the incandescent lamp which hung where the fire originated, did, within twenty-four hours before the fire, settle and shift themselves, so as to bring them in contact with the incandescent light, so that the light did set said pecans on fire, and by ordinary care the defendant could have foreseen that such shifting would occur, and that said fire would result therefrom.

The action, properly construed, sounds in tort founded on a breach of duty springing from a violation of the contract of bailment. Miller v. Ben H. Fletcher Co., 142 Ga. 668 (2) (83 S. E. 521); Bates v. Madison County, 32 Ga. App. 370 (3) (123 S. E. 158). Compare Fain v. Wilkerson, 22 Ga. App. 193 (2, 3) (95 S. E. 752). In such case it is necessary to set forth specific acts of negligence of the bailee in connection with the keeping and handling of the property. Stewart v. Greene, 124 Ga. 975 (53 S. E. 450); Parker Motor Co. v. Spiegal, 33 Ga. App. 795 (3) (127 S. E. 797).

' Many of the assignments of error are with reference to the trial judge’s charge in regard to the burden of proof. We shall consider [141]*141these as a whole. It has been stated that the term “burden of proof” has a dual meaning. “First, the necessity of establishing the existence of a certain fact or set of facts by evidence which preponderates to a legally required extent [in this State by a ‘preponderance of the evidence/ see Code §§ 38-105, 38-106]; or second, the necessity which rests on a party at any particular time during a trial to create a prima facie case in his own favor or to overthrow one when created against him.” 22 C. J. 68; Thayer on Evidence. In this connection it was said in the case of Hawkins v. Davie, 136 Ga. 550 (71 S. E.

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.E. 462, 59 Ga. App. 137, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richter-bros-v-atlantic-co-gactapp-1938.