Judd v. New York & T. S. S. Co.

Court: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Date filed: 1902-07-15
Citations: 117 F. 206, 54 C.C.A. 238, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4426
Copy Citations
2 Citing Cases
Lead Opinion
GRAY, Circuit Judge.

This was an action in tort, brought by H. C. Judd and Root, of Hartford, Conn., plaintiffs below and plaintiffs in error here, against the New York & Texas Steamship Company, popularly known as the “Mallory Line,” the defendant in error, to recover the sum of $26,538.88, the value of 869 bales of wool, destroyed by fire on July 2, 1896, while in the custody of the defendant, at Galveston, Tex. This wool came into the possession of the defendant by a shipment from the interior of Texas, on the 27th of June, 1896, upon two bills of lading of the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railroad Company. At Galveston, it was taken charge of by the defendant, to be shipped to Hartford, Conn., by one of its steamers scheduled to sail a week later, and while awaiting shipment, was stored in a frame shed on the Gulf front, known as the “Santa Fé Shed,” owned and occupied by defendant. This shed was about 400 feet long, and was situated a few feet, on its north side, from the wharf front to which it was parallel. It had what was known as a shell roof—that is, a board roof covered with tar paper and pitch, upon which shells had been placed while in a soft state. Immediately adjoining this shed, and separated from it only by a frame partition, was a shed known as the “Labadie Shed,” owned by the Galveston Wharf Company, and occupied by the Galveston Bagging Company. This shed was 475 feet long. It was in line with the “Santa Fé Shed,” and, like it, ran

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parallel with the wharf front, which was on its north side only a few feet away. It had the same pitch and shell roof that the other shed had, was open its entire length on the south side, to the height of from 12 to 16 feet, and, like the “Santa Fé Shed,” was built of Texas pine. Along this south side ran numerous railroad tracks, along which switch engines operated off and on day and night, frequently throwing sparks while so running, and witnesses testified that fires had several times that summer been started from these sparks. The uncontroverted evidence was, that in this “Labadie Shed” there had been stored, for a period of several months prior to the destruction of plaintiffs’ wool, between 6,ooo and 8,ooo bales of jute butts, and it is likewise uncontroverted that this is a highly inflammable material, which would instantly ignite from a spark. It is not denied that this jute had become dry and loose, and was scattered all over the floor and near the railroad tracks. The testimony also showed that this shed was without a watchman or fire appliances of any kind, and that it was a resort for loafers and tramps, who were seen there every day on top of the bales, playing cards or sleeping. It was also in evidence that a long season of drought had preceded the fire, in consequence of which all the sheds had become dry and inflammable. The testimony tended to show that the “Labadie Shed” was not built as a warehouse for storage purposes, but was adapted only for the temporary care of merchandise about to be transshipped, the cars coming down on the open south side, and the vessels lying at the wharf front on the north side. These conditions, as to which there was no conflict of testimony, were such as ought to have been known by defendant’s agents and officers. Defendant’s watchman, however, testified that he had observed the unprotected situation of the “Labadie Shed” and the fact that it was the. resort of idle persons, and had mentioned it to the defendant’s agent, who visited the wharf every day, and also to the superintendent. There was also testimony tending to show that proximity to such a shed was dangerous, because it was open on the south side and free to access by everybody, and unprotected from the sparks of passing locomotives. There was also testimony tending to show that, while there were some barrels of water and buckets in the “Santa Fé Shed,” in which the plaintiffs’ merchandise was stored, there were no fire hydrants near the shed, and no hose on hand sufficient to make available the fire hydrants that were from ioo to 300 feet away, alongside of other sheds. There was also evidence tending to show that other sheds along this water front, used for similar purposes, were differently constructed, being built with standard 18-inch fire brick partition walls extending above the roof and supplied with hydrants, hose and fire pumps. This being the condition of things, a fire broke out in the “Labadie Shed” on the afternoon of July 2d, burning so fiercely and spreading with such rapidity as to be beyond the control of the fire department of Galveston, when it arrived upon the scene. The fire spread rapidly to the “Santa Fé Shed,” and in a short time, it with its contents was entirely destroyed.

The learned judge of the court below submitted the case to the jury, and in doing so, delivered a charge at some length, in which, after discussing certain aspects of the case with which we are not here concerned, used the following language:

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“There remains, therefore, what seems to me to be the only question that I should be justified in submitting to you, and for the present, I shall submit to you. For the present. I say to the jury that the question is a question of fact for their determination, and they will take the evidence and decide upon it. I shall reserve the question for further consideration, whether there is any evidence to go to the jury in support of the plaintiffs’ claim. For the present I shall ask you to determine whether the defendant was negligent in the only particular that is left, viz.: whether having received the wool and having put it into its shed, it omitted any duty which it fairly owed to the shippers, under all the circumstances disclosed by the evidence.
“Negligence, as you know, is the absence of due care according to the circumstances of any particular case. A man’s duty varies according to the circumstances in which he is put There are times when his duty may be more exigent than at another time. Circumstances and surroundings may be such as to call for more care at some times than at other times. Therefore, it is impossible, in most cases, to lay down any general rule. All that a court can say to a jury is what I have just said to you, that negligence is the absence of care according to the circumstances of the particular case. For example, take the testimony as you have heard it, consider the surroundings of this place of storage, of this shed, consider the material of which it was made, its neighborhood to other structures, the precautions that they took against fire, the proximity to the railroad, the presence or absence of a watchman in their own shed and in the neighboring shed, and other circumstances that the testimony may disclose. I do not pretend to narrate them exhaustively. Take all that may bear on the defendant’s duty, and decide whether it did what a reasonable, prudent man, under all the circumstances, would have done. It certainly owed the duty of care to the shipper. Did it discharge that duty? For example, did it have sufficient appliances to put out any ordinary fire, such as under ordinary circumstances might fairly be anticipated? Of course, it was not bound to have appliances at hand such as would enable it to keep off fire from its premises under all circumstances. It did not guaranty that no fire could spring up that would attack its warehouse successfully. All that the duty of care could impose upon it would be to provide such reasonable precautions as a prudent man would ordinarily take. It had, as you will recall, various appliances. The testimony wiil enable you to determine what they were, and you must decide whether they were fairly sufficient under all ordinary circumstances. They did watch these premises to a certain degree, I do not know how much. The testimony does not seem to disclose that it was negligent in that particular. The jury will determine how that was.”

We quote this passage from the charge, not because there is any exception- to it by the plaintiffs in error, for, as will be seen hereafter, what the court said or did not say in its charge, is not before us for review; we only refer to the passage just quoted as a clear and proper statement of the law applicable to the case, as far as it was submitted to the jury, without commenting upon the language of the court, which seems to confine the question of negligence to the period of time after the wool had been received and put into the defendant’s shed. It appears from the record, that after the jury had been out for a number of hours, they came into court and asked for further instructions, and the learned judge of the court below instructed them, briefly, as follows :

“Gentlemen: Tour communication to me states that you desire me to explain more fully what constitutes negligence and concerning the amount of care the defendants were obliged to use prior to July 2d, or upon that date. I am very much afraid that I cannot be able to do more than repeat what I said to you before. I cannot lay down any rule for you to follow, with regard to this case, except the rule that I have given- you, that negligence is the absence of care according to the circumstances. What sort of care
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did the circumstances that have been proved fairly require? What would an ordinarily prudent man have been likely to do in caring for property intrusted to his charge? I cannot say, for example, there seemed to have been five hydrants there and there ought to have been six, or that there seemed to have been a two inch nozzle from the hydrant and there ought to have been a three or four inch nozzle. It is impossible for me to give instructions of that kind to the jury. The law does not lay down any rules in such detail and, in cases of this sort that are indeterminate in their nature, it requires the jury to consider all the surrounding circumstances and then decide what would have been done by an ordinarily prudent man under such circumstances and in such surroundings, in caring for property intrusted to his charge.
“I trust I make that clear. It is really all that I can say to you. I cannot take up these details and say, ‘Now, in my opinion this work was carelessly done,’ or ‘This was not carelessly done.’ It is not for me to do that at all; and I must turn the whole subject over to you, for you to apply the rule that I have just indicated.”

We quote tHis supplementary instruction, for the reason stated in regard to the quotation from the first charge of the court; that is, because it repeats with admirable clearness and emphasis the distinction that the learned judge at first made, with reference to the facts of this case, between the functions of the court and jury. Afterwards, the jury returned, and announced to> the court that they were unable to agree upon a verdict. Whereupon, the learned judge of the court below directed them to render a verdict for the defendant. This the jury accordingly did.

The action of the court below, in thus withdrawing the question of negligence from the jury and directing a verdict for the defendant, was excepted to by the plaintiffs, and is the ground upon which, what we regard as the principal assignment of error is based. The whole of the evidence has been made part of the record, by bill of exceptions ■ duly sealed, and we have carefully considered the same in connection with the assignment of error just referred to.

The power of a court, when the evidence in a case has been closed, to withdraw it altogether from the jury and direct a verdict for plaintiff or defendant, as the one or the other may be proper, is a very important and salutary one. Where the evidence is undisputed, or is of such conclusive character that the court, in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion, would be compelled to set aside a verdict returned in opposition to it, the practical assertion of this power is salutary and promotive of the ends of justice, and does not conflict with the constitutional right to a trial by jury. The proper function of a jury does not begin, until there has been evidence submitted to it of facts, from which, in such a case as this, negligence may be reasonably inferred. If there has been no evidence adduced by the party upon whom the onus of proof is imposed, establishing or tending to establish such facts, there is nothing for the jury to consider, and it is the duty of the court to say so, and not leave the issue to be determined by the possible caprice or prejudice of those composing the jury. This is now the well-settled doctrine and practice of both English and American courts, and has been sanctioned by numerous decisions of the supreme court of the United States. Ryder v. Wombwell, L. R. 4 Exch. 36; Jewell v. Parr, 13 C. B. 916; Toomey v. Railway Co., 3 C. B. (N. S.) 150; Giblin v. McMullen, R. R. 2 P. C. 335; Railway 'Co. v. Jackson, 3

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App. Cas. 193; Pleasants v. Fant, 22 Wall. 116, 22 L. Ed. 780; Improvement Co. v. Munson, 14 Wall. 448, 20 L. Ed. 867; Commissioners v. Clark, 94 U. S. 284, 24 L. Ed. 59; Motey v. Granite Co., 20 C. C. A. 366, 74 Fed. 155.

It is, however, equally important that a court should not, merely upon its own conclusion, as to what should be the proper determination of a question of fact, invade the province of the jury, and substitute its own judgment for theirs, when that question is one about which reasonable men might differ.

A careful reading of the evidence in this case, as it is presented in the record, inclines us to consider the question of negligence in this case, to be one “about which reasonable men may fairly differ.” There was certainly testimony tending to show a condition of more than ordinary hazard in and about the premises, in which plaintiffs’ goods were stored by the defendant. Defendant was a bailee for hire, and owed to the plaintiffs the duty of bestowing upon the goods committed to its charge, the care which an ordinarily prudent person would take as to his own property, under the circumstances surrounding him. The plaintiffs had no part in the selection of the place of deposit. We cannot say that in this case there was no evidence which the jury could consider, tending to show, on the part of the defendant, a want of that due care, in providing for the safety of plaintiffs’ goods, which, under the peculiar circumstances existing, it owed to the plaintiffs. There was evidence adduced on the part of the plaintiffs, which at least tended to show- a more than ordinary fire hazard, to which goods stored in the “Santa Fé Shed” were necessarily subjected, and there was also evidence tending to show a want of adequate precautions against such hazard on the part of the defendant. The evidence may have been, and probably was, conflicting as to the appliances usually found in such places in cities, for the prompt extinguishment of a fire, but there certainly was some testimony to the effect that there were no fire hydrants within easy reach of this highly inflammable “Santa Fé Building,” and none at all readily available for the “Labadie Shed,” in which were piled up thousands of bales of jute, much of which had become loose and was scattered about the floor. This material was admitted to be highly inflammable, and it was testified that it was specially exposed to ignition from passing locomotives or from the carelessness of the tramps that infested the shed. Furthermore, it is not denied that there was no watchman of this shed at all.

The learned judge of the court below, in the passage from his charge, which we have already quoted, correctly defined, in general terms, the degree of care required by law from the defendant, in regard to the wool received from the plaintiffs, and correctly instructed them that a want of care, thus defined, would be culpable negligence on the part of the defendant, for which it would be liable to the plaintiffs, and that, whether such culpable negligence was established by the evidence, was'a question of fact for their determination upon all the evidence in the case.

But the attitude of the court below, as regards one phase of the general question, as to whether there was culpable negligence on the part of the defendant, or not, must now be noticed. Certain language

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used by it seems to sanction the contention of the defendant here, that if proper precautions had been taken against fire on its own premises, no responsibility attached to it by reason of a fire starting on, and communicating from, adjoining premises, not owned or occupied or controlled by it, and which was so violent in character as to defy any resistance that could possibly be opposed to it. This contention practically ignores the responsibility attaching to defendant, by reason of the manifest danger to its own premises, arising from the specially hazardous conditions existing on the adjoining premises'. To the proposition involved in this contention, we cannot agree. The evidence tending to show these dangerous conditions, and the special hazard of fire to defendant’s property, arising therefrom, is not contradicted. We have already called attention to the fact that there was testimony tending to show that these conditions were known to and recognized by certain controlling officers of the defendant company, and we again repeat that the danger, as testified to, was so manifest and open as to affect the defendant with knowledge, even in the absence of direct testimony in that regard. It will not do to say that, because these conditions existed upon adjoining property not under the control of the defendant, they could not be guarded against. A dangerous condition on one’s own property may exist by reason of, and be entirely owing to the existence of, dangerous conditions on an adjoining property. This is especially true as to the danger of fire. This dangerous condition, though derivative and not primary, if it is recognized, can be guarded against. Special watchmen placed near the adjoining property may diminish this danger, and it might be avoided altogether, so far as movable property is concerned, by declining to expose it to the risk, or by removing it therefrom. Whether the situation was unusually hazardous to the knowledge of the defendant, and whether, if it were, it was negligence in defendant, in the face of such hazard, to place the plaintiffs’ wool in the “Santa Fé Shed,” or whether, having placed it there, it took such additional precautions as were available and proportioned to the special danger involved, were questions for the jury, under all the evidence in the case. Hardman v. Railroad Co., 27 C. C. A. 407, 83 Fed. 88, 39 L. R. A. 300; Thomas v. Lancaster Mills, 19 C. C. A. 88, 71 Fed. 481; Tanner v. Railroad Co., 108 N. Y. 623, 15 N. E. 379; Hewett v. Railroad Co., 63 Iowa, 612, 19 N. W. 790.

The evidence bearing, upon this phase of the case, as well as that more especially, concerning, the provisions made by the defendant itself, for protection against fire on its own premises, all being relevant to the general question of negligence on the part of the defendant, was, in our opinion, such: as to require a. submission of that question to the consideration of the jury, and we are of opinion that the court erred in withdrawing, it therefrorp.

It would not' be necessary to notice the second assignment of error, were it not that the disposition, of this case will involve a new trial, and it is important that the views of this court should be expressed in regard; to the. subjppt-matter, of that, assignment-.-

Evidence, was. admitted* against the objection of the plaintiffs, to. show- that the wool was, insqied in the Insurance Company of North

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America, and that the insurance money had been paid to plaintiffs, under an agreement that the money should not be repaid, unless plaintiffs were able in this suit to recover it. This .evidence was offered by defendant, avowedly for its bearing upon the question of negligence. It was to show that the insurance company was the real plaintiff, and that as it, with other insurance companies, had a uniform rate of premium for insurance on the sheds, it was estopped, as real plaintiff, from saying that the risk was unusually hazardous.

The payment made by the insurance company to the plaintiffs was, as shown by the receipt in evidence, a conditional loan, and not a payment. It did not destroy plaintiffs’ right of action against the defendant, nor put the insurance company in the situation of a real or nominal plaintiff, so that its admissions or conduct could be taken in any wise to affect the real plaintiff by estoppel, or otherwise. Even if the loss had been out and out paid, the equitable right of subrogation inuring to the insurer, would only authorize him to use the name of the insured in an action against one, whose failure of duty to the insured caused the loss. There is no contract or privity between the insurer and the defendant. In St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 139 U. S. 223, 11 Sup. Ct. 554, 35 L. Ed. 154, the court say: “By the strict rules of the common law, it (the right of the insurer) must be asserted in the name of the assured, but in any form of remedy, the insurer can take nothing by subrogation but the rights of the assured, and if the assured have no right of action, none passes to the insurer.” The rights in litigation in this case are those which accrue out of the contractual relations existing between the plaintiffs and the defendant company. No others are the subject of discussion or determination, and nothing that passed between the plaintiffs and the insurance company can affect those rights. The transaction between the insurance company and the assured was, therefore, without relevancy, and was incompetent as evidence in the case.

The judgment of the court below is reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.

¶.

2. Liability of carriers as warehousemen, see note to Wade v. Lumber Co., 20 C. C. A. 529.