The defendant William E. Sullivan was a licensed warehouseman under the statute — chapter 172, Revised Statutes 1899 — and the other defendants were sureties on his bond as such. This is an action on the bond. The petition alleged that the relator deposited with the defendant warehouseman certain goods and chattels for storage which he wrongfully converted to his own use, etc. The answer was a general denial. There was a trial in which the relator had judgment, and the defendants appealed.
I. The defendants contend that the relator’s petition fails to state a cause of action in that it does not allege that-the relator was the owner and in possession *620of the property alleged to have been converted. By reference to that pleading we find it alleges that while the relator was the oivner of certain goods, she delivered the same to the defendant. William E. Sullivan for storage purposes, etc. Prom this allegation that the relator was the owner and delivered the goods to defendant, the further fact that she was in possession is necessarily implied. Bliss on Code Plead., secs. 175, 176; Ins. Co. v. Tribble, 86 Mo. App. 546. The allegation, we think, fully meets the requirement of the rule declared in Bank v. Tiger, etc., Land Co., 152 Mo. l. c. 157.
The bond sued on was to the State for $25,000 conditioned (1) “for the faithful performance of his duty as public warehouseman; (2) and as security for the payment of all penalties and damages found adjudged by due course of law for violation of the provisions of chapter 172 of the Revised Statutes of 1899,. and of their full and unreserved compliance with the law of the State of Missouri and in relation thereto.” Nowhere in the relator’s petition is there to be found a formal assignment of a breach of either one of the three conditions of the bond just quoted. But it is alleged that while the relator was the owner of certain goods and chattels of a specified value, she delivered the same to the defendant Sullivan for storage purposes at his public warehouse and that he received the same and that he “was guilty of a breach of said bond in this, that he being in possession of said goods and chattels unlawfully converted the same to his own use, whereby,” etc. The first of the conditions of said bond “was for the faithful performance of his duty as public warehouseman,” and the assignment of the breach of it while somewhat informal was, under our very liberal code, sufficient. It is plain that the relator did not attempt to assign a breach of the second and third conditions of the bond, and for that reason they need not be further noticed.
It is the implied contract of a warehouseman on *621receiving goods for storage that he will use ordinary care in keeping them (28 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law [2 Ed.], 648) ; and it is his main duty to make redelivery when the bailment terminates. Schouler on Bail., and Car., sec. 117; Story on Bail., sec. 450. The faithful performance of this common-law and contractual duty was one of those the defendant Sullivan as warehouseman by his bond covenanted to perform. The condition in the bond whose breach is assigned is quite similar to that required by the statute in the bonds- of a sheriff (section 10036), coroner (section 6630), constable (section 878), administrator (section 18), curator and the like.
In State ex rel. v. Tittmann, 134 Mo. 162, the bond was conditioned for the faithful discharge of the duty by the curator according to law. It was said in the course of the opinion in that case that it stood as an indemnity against all the natural and proximate consequences of a breach of that duty. In Bank v. Leyser, 116 Mo. l. c. 75, it was said that where indemnity alone is expressed it has always been held that damage must be sustained before a recovery can be had. In State ex rel. v. Thompson, 81 Mo. App. 549, the bond sued on was that of a notary, and was conditioned “for the performance of the duties -of his office according to law.” The petition of- the relator alleged that Thompson, a notary, negligently took and certified to a false acknowledgment of a deed of trust; that one Zimmerman introduced to said notary a man as Lee Martin, and at the same time producing a deed of trust covering certain real estate which purported to be signed by Lee Martin as grantor to secure the payment of a note to Henry Zimmerman. The latter requested the notary to take the acknowledgment of the man introduced to him as Lee Martin, to the deed of trust. The notary inquired of the cognizer whether he had signed the instrument and whether it was his voluntary act, etc. No further identification was required. The notary certified that *622Lee Martin had appeared before him and was personally known to him to be the same person whose name was subscribed to the writing as a party thereto. The man who acknowledged the deed was a white man wno had no interest in the land, while the real owner was a negro whose name was Lee Martin. Zimmerman put the deed on record and sold the note to relator. The trial court at the conclusion of the evidence by an instruction declared that the finding should be for nominal damages since the relator had failed to aver and prove substantial damages in that she had exhausted her remedy against the maker or indorser of the note or that the action would be futile. And this ruling was approved by the reviewing court. And the opinion was expressed by that court that the bond already referred to was ‘ ‘ purely one of indemnity. ’ ’ -
Accordingly, it would seem that the obligation of the bond sued on in the present case is one of indemnity, and that in such cases damages must be sustained before a recovery can be had thereon. Hax v. Hax, 84 Mo. App. l. c. 310-311; Hicks v. Hoos, 44 Mo. App. 571. And though there be a breach of the bond, the recovery thereon will be limited to nominal damages until substantial damages have been sustained as in State v. Thompson, supra; but a recovery of the latter kind may be had where they are the natural and proximate consequence of the breach of the condition, as in State v. Tittman, supra. It appears from the allegations of the petition that the damages sustained by relator are such as naturally and proximately proceed from the breach of the defendant Sullivan’s duty as warehouseman, and are therefore directly recoverable. As has been seen, the bond of a sheriff and thatofalicensedwarehouseman are alike, conditioned for the faithful performance of his duty. Now, suppose the former should receive money on an execution, and instead of paying it over to the execution plaintiff, as is his duty, he converts it to his own use, it would not be pretended that no action *623would lie on Ms bond against Mm and Ms sureties, or that a recovery could not be had for the damages so resulting from such a breach of duty: The damages in such case would proceed naturally and proxirnately ' from th e breach. Here, a public warehouseman as such receives property for storage and after doing so converts it to his own use, in consequence of which the bailor necessarily sustains damages'to the extent of the value of the property made way with. The damages sustained would proceed as naturally and proximately from the breach in the latter as in the former case. There can be no difference between the two cases. We can find no fault with the action of the trial court in overruling the defendant’s objections to the plaintiff’s petition.
No serious objection is seen in the action of the court in permitting plaintiff to testify respecting the value of an embroidered silk quilt, family pictures, etc. These articles had no market value but were of some value to the plaintiff and as to the latter she testified. This was proper. Sutherland on Dam. (2 Ed.), sec. 955; Spooner v. Railway, 23 Mo. App. 403; Muritz v. Railway, 23 Fed. Rep. 765. The value of the various articles converted was, we think, sufficiently proven to carry that issue to the jury.
The defendants at the conclusion of the evidence jointly requested both an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to it and one of a peremptory character which were by the court refused. It is contended that one or the other of these instructions should have been given since the statute referred to at thé Qutset — sections 10568, 30569 — requires the application of any one desiring to obtain a license as a warehouseman to set forth in Ms application the “location and name of such warehouse and the individual name of each person interested as owner or principal in the management of the same,” and to give a bond to the State with good and sufficient security conditioned for the faithful performance of *624the duties of warehouseman, and that at the time the sureties enter upon their engagement the warehouse, to which the bond refers and which is the subject of ¡their undertaking, must be made definite and certain as to location and name. !
It is further contended that in the application for the license, to which the bond was attached, the location and name of the warehouse was stated to be at one‘place in Nansas City, while it appeared from the evidence that that in which plaintiff’s goods were stored by the defendant Sullivan was at an entirely different place and under a different name; and therefore, under the familiar doctrine, that the obligation of sureties must be construed strictissimi juris, that such obligation did not in the present case extend to the transaction between the relator and the defendant Sullivan under the latter name, or at the latter place, and this being so there could be no rightful recovery as against .the defendants who are sureties. But as a good cause of action was alleged and proved as to the defendant William E. Sullivan, if not as to the other two, the‘demurrer being joint, was, upon principle, as we think, properly refused. Bliss on Code Plead., sec. 417; Dunn v. Gibson, 9 Neb. 513; People v. Mayor New York, 28 Barb. 240; Woodbury v. Sackrider, 2 Abb. Pr. 402; Phillips v. Hagadon, 12 How. Pri. 17. No error is discovered in the action of the court in giving the relator’s instructions, nor in any other respect.
The judgment was manifestly for the right.party and must be affirmed.
All concur.