Tubbs v. American Transfer & Storage Co.

297 S.W. 670, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 639
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1927
DocketNo. 9970. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 670 (Tubbs v. American Transfer & Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tubbs v. American Transfer & Storage Co., 297 S.W. 670, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 639 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

This suit was instituted by S. F. Tubbs, appellant, in a district court of Dallas county, Texas, against American Transfer & Storage Company, a corporation, and the Globe Indemnity Company, a corporation, appellees, to recover the value of certain household and kitchen furniture, and from a judgment in favor of appellees this appeal has been duly perfected. The facts are as follows:

The American Transfer & Storage Company conducted a warehouse in the city of Dallas for the purpose of storing goods, wares, and merchandise for others. In August, 1923, appellant stored in such warehouse *671 his household and kitchen furniture and some family wearing apparel, and about the 2d of September following the said warehouse was destroyed by fixe, and appellant thereby suffered a loss. The Globe Indemnity Company executed a warehouse bond for its codefendant, and was made defendant on the theory that appellant was a beneficiary of the bond. The suit against it was dismissed by the court, but whether upon a general exception or motion the record is not clear, as the judgment of dismissal is not shown. The bond executed is not in the record, and in view of these facts the assignments of error in reference to such dismissal cannot be considered, and the case must be affirmed as- to this appellee. The American Transfer & Storage Company will hereinafter be referred to as appellee.

Appellee’s warehouse was a large, one-story building, its outer walls of brick, and its dimensions 50x160 feet. It was divided into compartments, but did not purpoii; to be a fireproof building. The building was located in the vicinity of railroad switching tracks, where railroad engines were frequently operated. The fire occurred between 3 and 4 o’clock on a 'Sunday morning. There was no night watchman, nor .anyone else regularly kept in the building at night, and no one there on the occasion of the fire. An employee, who had charge of the building, would lock it up at about 8 o’clock in the evening, look over the premises on the outside, and then go to his home across the street from the’warehouse, and usually retire for the night. There were no automatic sprinklers installed in the warehouse, ánd the fire-fighting appliances consisted of eight pyrenes, designed to extinguish fires by the use of chemicals, located in different places in the building; but these were operated by hand, and could subserve no purpose, in the absence of some one in the building to operate them. Two policemen regularly walked the beat in which the warehouse was situated. Appellant’s goods were stored against the north wall of the building,- in a lower compartment. The fire originated near the central portion of the building, and appellant’s goods were about 90 feet from the point where, in the progress of the fire, the roof fell in. Appellant was absent from the city at the time the fire occurred, and received a notice written immediately after the fire, that the fire resulted in practically a total loss to his goods. In the trial of the case a number of pieces of furniture, salvaged from the fire, were identified by appellant as belonging to him. Some of this furniture was in a reasonably, good condition. There is substantial evidence showing that the installation of automatic sprinklers in a warehouse materially lessens the insurance premium on property stored therein, and that such appliances will usually hold a fire within a small radius around the place of its origin.

The appellant’s petition alleged the total loss of his property through the negligence of appellee, alleged the character of building used by appellee, and charged specific acts of negligence in its failure to keep a night watchman within the premises at night, and a failure to install and maintain a system of automatic sprinklers. It was also charged that appellee conducted his business as a public warehouse. In its answer appellee specifically denied any negligence on its part, or on the part of its employés, as to the origin of the fire, or as to any failure to exercise ordinary care to protect and guard appellant’s property from loss or damage by fire. The pleadings of both are full and complete as to the matters alleged, and it is unnecessary to quote from either at length. The issues made by appellant here discussed are raised by pleadings and by appropriate assignments of error. The defensive matters urged by appellee find a basis in its pleadings. At the conclusion of appellant’s testimony the court, on motion of appellee, gave peremptory instructions in its favor, on the ground that appellant had failed by its testimony to raise any issue of fact upon which a judgment in his favor could be based.

It is immaterial whether appellee was operating its warehouse imder the provisions of title 93, Revised Statutes, providing for and regulating public warehouses. Appellant alleges that it was so operating, and the record discloses that a bond required by article 5569 of such act was executed by it inferentially in conformity to such article. The receipt in evidence, issued by appellee, conformed to the provisions of chapter 4 of said title in reference to the issuance of uniform warehouse receipts, and, were it material to a disposition of the case, we would be inclined to hold that the record discloses the fact that appellee was operating a public warehouse under the provisions of said title of our Revised Statutes. A determination of this question is rendered unnecessary, because article 5632 of the Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act, declaring that “a warehouseman shall be liable for any loss or injury to the goods caused by his failure to exercise such care in regard to them as a reasonably careful owner of similar goods would exercise, but he shall not be liable, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, for any loss or injury to the goods which could not have been avoided by the exercise of such care,” is but declaratory of the common law as applied to the duty of warehouse-men. Whittington v. Cameron Compress Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 268 S. W. 216; Cameron Compress Co. v. Whitington (Tex. Com. App.) 280 S. W. 527; annotations in 16 A. L. R. 280, Texas eases, 282.

The rule is well settled by these cases that a warehouseman is not an insurer of the property in his custody against fire, but is responsible for loss or injury from this *672 cause only In case of failure on Ms part to exercise ordinary care to prevent damage to, or destruction of, the property in storage from such cause. This duty, as to the exercise of ordinary care, extends, not only to the means employed to prevent a fire, but also to means employed to arrest its progress after its origin. It is an admitted' fact in this ease that whatever damage was occasioned appellant was due to a fire that virtually consumed appellee’s warehouse and its contents. The burden of proof rested on appellant to show that the damage he suffered was the proximate result of the failure of appellee to exercise ordinary care to prevent such destruction of the property in its custody.

There is no evidence that the fire originated through any negligence on the part of appellee or its employés, and in reference to this element of appellant’s right of recovery there is a failure of proof. If appellee’s duty as a warehouseman ended with the exercise of ordinary care to guard against the origin of fire, then the peremptory instruction was warranted; but its duty did not end there.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 670, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tubbs-v-american-transfer-storage-co-texapp-1927.