Turner v. North American Van Lines, Inc.

287 S.W.2d 384, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 46
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 21, 1956
DocketNos. 29358-29360
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 287 S.W.2d 384 (Turner v. North American Van Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. North American Van Lines, Inc., 287 S.W.2d 384, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 46 (Mo. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

WOLFE, Commissioner.

This is an action by the owners of some household furniture and like effects to recover for damage to their property while it was in storage and while being transported from storage by a motor truck freight transport company. The defendants are the transit company, an insurer of the goods while in transit, and another insurance company that insured the goods for certain periods of their storage.

There was a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against defendant North American Van Lines for $357.02 and.a judgment for a like amount plus interest and attorney’s fees against The Home Insurance Company of New York, the company that insured the goods while in transit, and against the Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company in the sum of $1,500, plus penalties for vexatious refusal to pay. All the defendants appealed.

The facts as developed disclose that Burr V. Turner is an officer in the United States Navy. In January of 1952 he was [385]*385stationed in Washington, D. C., and resided in Arlington, Virginia. At that time he •was ordered to Japan and his wife, who was not to accompany him, planned to go to Tulot, Arkansas, where her mother resided. They were confronted with the problem of moving their furniture from their home in Arlington and decided to store it in a warehouse of the Alpha Van Lines located in nearby Alexandria, Virginia.

On February 23, 1952, the furniture was called for by the driver of an Alpha Van Lines truck and one of its employees prepared an inventory of the goods as they were packed and loaded, noting on the inventory such things as mars and scratches on the various pieces of furniture. The furniture was then taken to the Alpha Van Lines warehouse where it was stored. At the time the plaintiffs thought that they might ship their belongings to Memphis, Tennessee, and they took out a policy of insurance in the sum of $3,000, insuring the property against damage while in transit from Alexandria, Virginia, to Memphis, Tennessee. This policy was issued by defendant Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company and it expired on April 23, 1952, while the goods were still in storage in the Alpha Van Lines warehouse. Thereafter the plaintiffs took out another policy with the same company which insured the goods against damage from June 9, 1952, until they were removed from the warehouse by defendant North American Van Lines on November 28, 1952.

During the time of storage the plaintiffs did not see their furniture except on one occasion. This was upon the return of Commander Turner from his overseas assignment. On a trip to Washington in the early part of November, 1952, he went with Mrs. Turner and Mrs. Orme, a friend, to the warehouse where they saw all the furniture packed in a sort of “cubicle” and stacked high. It was dusty and the warehouse was damp. It appeared to Mrs. Orme to have been crammed into a space that was too small, but they observed no damage to the furniture.

Commander Turner’s new assignment of duty took him to California and he and his wife decided to ship the furniture to Tulot, Arkansas, and put it in a vacant house next to the house where her mother lived. To accomplish this the defendant North American Van Lines was employed to move the furniture from the warehouse in Alexandria to Tulot, and a policy of insurance was taken out with defendant The Home Insurance Company of New York to cover the goods while in transit from Alexandria to Tulot.

On November 28, 1952, the North American Van Lines loaded the furniture in Alexandria and took it by truck to Tulot. The driver of the van for the North American Van Lines stated by deposition offered by plaintiffs that he remembered calling at the Alpha warehouse for the goods and that the Alpha warehouse was similar to most other warehouses. He said that the furniture was stored in bins that opened onto an aisle. He loaded about 75% of the furniture himself; but on the larger pieces he received help from employees of the warehouse. Quite a bit of the furniture was wrapped in heavy-duty wrapping paper and, as in most warehouses, some pieces were stacked upon others. He took an inventory as he loaded and noted such things as soil, wear and scratches that furniture usually has by way of use, and other damage such as chips. ' He noticed that a rocking chair was broken and that1 there was a door off the cabinet. He said that on the way to Tulot the road was rough with snow and ice and that the weather was bad, but he also said that none of'the rain or snow reached the goods as the equipment he was driving was good and the furniture protected. j '

When he arrived at Tulot he was met by Commander Turner and his wife and told to place the furniture in the vacant house. He said that the house was damp. He suggested that it would be well to have a fire. Commander Turner stated that the driver told him that the furniture was in such poor condition in Alexandria that he hesitated to load it, but’ the driver by dep[386]*386osition stated that Ke had no recollection of making such a statement.

Commander and Mrs. Turner testified that they saw the North American van unload their furniture at .Tulot .and they saw a broken bicycle, a broken rocking chair, and some items scratched. They noticed mold on some items and others were not securely fastened in the cartons in which they'had been packed. Some of the furniture was wrapped and they did not see its condition. They insisted that the driver of the van note on the inventory: “Shipment not unpacked. Damages noted by shipper include mold on table pads, scratches and dents on some furniture. Some furniture still paper wrapped, so damage not totalled.” The van driver also stated that if any damage had occurred during transit h.e would have noted it.

The day after the delivery of the furniture in Tulot the Turners left for California. During the time they were in California no one had access to the house except Mrs. Turner’s mother and brother. The furniture was not touched. Toward the end of January, 1953, Mrs. Turner returned to Tulot and employed the Needles Van Lines to move the furniture to St. Louis. This was done on February 3, 1953.

At that time the driver for Needles Van Lines called for the furniture and he testified that the goods were not placed in the house properly, some pieces being put on top of others, and that he, directed Mrs. Turner’s attention to some items of damage. He did not make an inventory of the goods as he loaded them, but delivered them to the Fidelity Storage Company in St. Louis where he dictated an inventory to an employee and indicated the condition each item was in at the time he picked it up. The property remained in the Fidelity warehouse until March, 1953, when it was removed to a new home of the plaintiffs in Olivette, in St. Louis Coftn'ty.

Then the plaintiffs for the first time examined the furniture and determined what damage all of it had suffered. They employed a man to refinish quite a few of the major pieces which were scarred and he testified that his charge for the total work was $2,260.50.

Both Commander Turner and Mrs. Turner stated that the condition of their furniture was good with some noted exceptions at the time it was taken from their home in Arlington. They told of the condition in which .they found it at the time they examined it in March of 1953, but both stated that they did not know when or where the damage to it had occurred.

The appealing defendants each contend that the court erred in, refusing to direct a verdict for.them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Holman v. Columbia Gas of Ohio
2019 Ohio 3126 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 S.W.2d 384, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-north-american-van-lines-inc-moctapp-1956.