This is a bailor-bailee controversy over damage to-a cargo trailer, allegedly borrowed for ten days from plaintiff-respondents, Whitlock and wife, by the defendant-petitioner Trammell, under express agreement of the latter to return .it in like good order as when received, except for usual wear and tear, and actually returned in severely damaged condition. Notwithstanding a verdict for the plaintiff-respondents, Whitlock, the trial court held for Trammell, but the Court of Civil Appeals reversed that judgment and rendered judgment against Trammell. 237 S.W.2d 451. Trammell. accordingly seeks relief here.
As to the failure of the plaintiff-respondents to plead negligence, the defendant’s failure to except as required by Rule 90, Tex.Rules Civ.Proc., and failure to bring forward any objection to evidence or to the charge based on the pleadings are a sufficient answer. And there was obviously no surprise or other injustice to the defendant on the trial, because the evidence clearly shows his defense to have been pitched on a denial that he ever made any agreement about, or had any other connection with, the respondents’ trailer.
The more serious questions are as to the verdict and the evidence. The latter does indeed fail to indicate an agreement with any express provisions for return of the trailer “in the same condition it was then in, except for general, wear and tear” or otherwise suggesting that the petitioner Trammell was to be an insurer of the vehicle. However, there is ample evidence of an agreement, for the mutual benefit of both parties, whereby .Trammell, who was engaged in the wholesale and hauling of produce, was to keep and use the trailer, while the respondents were to take one of the several trailers owned by Trammell and haul it 'by their truck or cab on a trip from Dallas to California and return. Trammell’s only complaint in this immediate connection is as to the matter of delivery of respondents’ trailer to him. We consider this to have been shown 'by the testimony of respondents to the effect that, following the agreement, they left their trailer on the street at a point near petitioner’s place of business and “under” a cab or truck of petitioner and that on the return of respondent Jack Whitlock from California, he was told by petitioner that the trailer had been damaged in a wreck and would be repaired by petitioner. The above quoted finding of the jury is, as stated below, to be taken as a finding of delivery. No error is assigned to its form. Since the main issue on the trial was not the fact of a bailment but whether the bailee was the petitioner or one Tucker hereinafter mentioned, the question of delivery was of small consequence in any event.
The evidence as to the fact of damage to the trailer, during the period of the bailment and the monetary equivalent of such damage is not 'brought into question.
The proof as to liability presents the principal problem in the case. Plaintiff-respondents testified to making the bailment and to the fact that the trailer was then in good order. They also gave proof that it was redelivered to them in very badly damaged condition, or rather that they repossessed it in the latter condition on the lot of the Fruehauf Trailer Company where petitioner told them . it was. It was also developed in evidence
We need not decide whether an agreement in the form submitted would be “an enlargement by special contract of the common law liability of a bailee”, as to which there is persuasive authority that it is not. Reconstruction Finance Corporation v. Peterson Bros., 5 Cir., 160 F.2d 124. In so far as the verdict states a “special contract” of the bailee to be responsible for any and all damage, there is no evidence to support it. The liability of the defendant-petitioner accordingly must rest on his failure' to exercise reasonable care for the bailed article, as in the usual case of a bailment for mutual benefit. If, assuming the fact of bailment, the evidence still presented a fact question of negligence, then the mere finding of a bailment would not support a judgment for the plaintiff bailors; but if, on the same assumption, the record- compelled the conclusion of negr ligence, judgment .should have been rendered in the trial court for the plaintiff-respondents, instead of the petitioner bailee, and the rendition of such judgment by the Court of Civil Appeals was proper.
' The defendant-petitioner -is correct in his contention that the burden of proof ón the whole case, including the issue of negligence, is on the respondent bailor, but as stated in Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd Ed., § 2508, “Where goods have béen committed to a bailee, and have either been lost or been returned in a damaged condition; and the bailee’s liability depends upon his negligence, the fact of negligencé may be presumed, placing on the bailee at least the duty of producing evidence of some other cause of loss or injury.” Without prejudice to the burden of proof being at all times on the bailor, the bailor under this latter rule makes a prima facie or presumptive case of negligence by proving the bailment and either the return of the goods by the bailee in a damaged condition, not existing at the time of their delivery to him, or a failure by him to return them at all. The rule is said to be based on the just and common sense view that the party in possession or control of an article is more likely to know and more properly charged with explaining the damage to it or disapl pearance of it than the bailor who entrusted it to his care. It is evidently supported by the weight of authority in the United States, including our own state. See cases collected in 8 C.J.S., Bailments, § 50, n. 87; 6 Am.Jur. (Rev.Ed.), Bailments § 371, n. 17; Rhodes v. Turner, Tex.Civ.App., 171 S.W.2d 208, mandamus to certify questions refused in Rhodes v. McDonald, 141 Tex. 478, 172 S.W.2d 972; Callihan v. Montrief, Tex.Civ.App., 71 S.W.2d 564, er. ref.; Alpine Forwarding Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 2 Cir., 60 F.2d 734, 736; Gilland v. Peter’s Dry Cleaning Co., 195 S.C. 417, 11 S.E. 857; Thomas v. Hackney, 192 Ala. 27, 68 So. 296.
As pointed out by Judge Learned Hand in the Alpine Forwarding Co. case, supra: “The presumption on which the bailor may rely is a mere rule for the conduct of the trial. It puts upon the bailee the risk of a directed verdict if he does not meet it, but it does no more; once he has done so, it disappears from the case. Thus, it can never concern the jury”. See also the Gil-land and Thomas cases last above cited.