Underhill v. United States Trust Co.

241 S.W. 812, 195 Ky. 149, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 281
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 812 (Underhill v. United States Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underhill v. United States Trust Co., 241 S.W. 812, 195 Ky. 149, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 281 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

The appellee trust company for many years past has been and is, in addition to its regular banking business, engaged in maintaining a vault with compartments therein which it lets for hire to its patrons to he used for the storage of their valuables. The rentals charged are based both upon the volume and the value of the package deposited. About the year 1911 Tracey Underhill deposited with the trust company a wooden box of small dimensions for which the company issued him a receipt, charging him three dollars per year for the storage of the box. This receipt was later endorsed by Tracey Underhill to show the property in the box belonged to appellant, Evie S. Underhill, and turned it over to her. Thereafter she paid the rental charges from time to time. The box remained in storage until November, 1916, when Mrs. Underhill, by le.tter dated at Detroit, Michigan, and addressed to the trust company, directed it to ship said box by express to Mrs. D. A. Kemper at a certain designated street number in the city of Detroit, state of Michigan, At this time the rentals on the package had not been paid for several months. She sent with the letter a check for six dollars to cover hack rentals, if any, due and to prepay the express on the package. Following this written direction the trust company, through Patrick Joyce, the keeper of its vault, immediately forwarded the package by Adams Express to Mrs. Kemper at the street address in Detroit, which the letter gave. The express company sent its messenger to the bank to receive the package and he issued a receipt therefor to the trust company. The trust company later paid the express charges on the package from Louisville to Detroit. On the shipping of the package the trust company, through its agents, notified [151]*151Mrs. Underhill in Detroit that her order had been complied with. After waiting a reasonable time for the delivery of the package Mrs. Underhill wrote the trust company that the package had not arrived. Thereupon the trust company took the matter up with the agents of the express company in Louisville, and asked them to make an investigation, which was done. The package was never delivered by the express company to Mrs. Kemper, to whom it was addressed, in Detroit, although the express company acknowledges it received the package from the trust company and issued its receipt therefor.

This action was instituted by Mrs. Underhill against the trust company to recover $4,000.00, the alleged value of the package, upon the averment that the trust company, as bailee, negligently failed to inform the express company of the nature and value of the contents of the box shipped to Mrs. Kemper and to fix a value thereon in accordance with the actual value of the contents of the box, so as to render the express company liable for the actual value of the goods lost, which she avers to be $4,000.00. It appears that when the package was first delivered to the trust company for storage information Avas given to its agents that the box contained silverware, but no value was fixed upon it. In fact, the trust company was never given any idea of the nature or value of the contents of the box, which was securely nailed. It now appears from the allegations of the petition that it contained several diamonds, a number of gold bracelets and some ancient and highly valuable point laces, in addition to a large quantity of table silverware. At the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff the trust company moved the court for a directed verdict in its favor, but this Avas overruled. The same motion was made at the conclusion of all the evidence and sustained by the court and the jury returned a verdict for the defendant trust company under the directions of the court. Judgment being entered thereon Mrs. Underhill appeals.

While there are a number of alleged reasons stated in brief for appellant why the judgment should be reversed, it appears to the court to be necessary to discuss but one: Was the trust company, in performing its duties in delivering the package under the direction of Mrs. Under-hill to the express company for shipment to Mrs. Kemper, in Detroit, a mere gratuitous bailee, required to exercise only slight care for the-protection of the property, and, if so, did the trust company exercise the required care and [152]*152diligence as such "bailee by following the instructions of Mrs. Underhill, to whom the property belonged, and consigning the package to the express company for shipment without making a written declaration to the express company of the value of the contents thereof? If the trust company failed to exercise the degree of care required of it as such bailee, in making such consignment it is liable to the owner of the package for its reasonable value, less such portion as she may have or may recover from the express company; but if it performed its duties under the instructions given by Mrs. Underhill by exercising the degree of care required of a bailee under like circumstances, it was not liable and the trial court did not err in directing the jury to find and return a verdict for the trust company.

The trust company was a bailee for hire, under its arrangement, to safely store and keep the box for Mrs. Underhill, and as such was under the duty of exercising the highest degree of care for the protection and preservation of the box and its contents, and liable to Mrs. Underhill for the reasonable value of the box and contents if it was lost or destroyed as the result of slight negligence on the part of the trust company. But when Mrs. Underhill, in Detroit, wrote the trust company to 'ship the box by express to a named person at a certain address, the bailment was ended as soon as the company, through its agents, carried out her instructions by delivering to the express company the box properly marked and addressed, as directed by her in her letter. The contract of bailment did not include nor contemplate that the trust company should perform any service for appellant except to safely keep and promptly deliver in good condition the box, at its vault, on her order. The company was not bound to make shipment of the box even on her order, but having undertaken to do so as a mere accommodation to her and at her request, it was bound to exercise such care as reasonably prudent persons, under like circumstances and conditions, usually employ in the performance of such gratuitous service and no more. As it is not claimed that the trust company did not properly, promptly and fully carry out the instructions given it by the owner of the box when it delivered the package to the express company properly addressed, taking a receipt therefor, it is hard to understand by what course of reasoning the appellant, Mrs. Underhill, expects to recover of the company the alleged value of the box and contents. [153]*153She insists, however, that it was the duty of the trust company to have declared to the express company at the time of the consignment of the package to it the reasonable value of the package so that said carrier would be liable to appellant in that sum, if lost, and as the trust company failed so to declare the value to the express company, and to take a receipt showing the same, it was guilty of such negligence on its part as rendered the trust company liable to appellant for the value of the box and its contents. The trust company cannot be held liable for the loss of the package unless it failed to perform some duty which it owed appellant and the package, or its value, was lost to appellant as a result of such failure of the trust company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 812, 195 Ky. 149, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underhill-v-united-states-trust-co-kyctapp-1922.