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Catoe v. Baker

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Nov 1, 1937
193 S.E. 735 (N.C. 1937)

Opinion

(Filed 24 November, 1937.)

Trespass § 7 — Evidence held insufficient to show that loss by theft resulted from wrongful trespass by defendants' employee.

Plaintiff's evidence disclosed that plaintiff ordered an article of merchandise from defendants' store, to be delivered on a certain day, and that defendants were informed that there would be no one at home the following day, that the merchandise was not delivered on the day agreed, and that the following day when plaintiff and his wife left their home they locked the doors and nailed down the windows, that when they returned the article of merchandise was sitting in the living room, the window of which was raised, and the nail which had held it forced out, and personal property of great value taken from the house, and that all the other windows and doors were locked or fastened. Plaintiff alleged that the wrongful trespass of defendants' employee in the course of his employment made it possible for a thief to enter and steal the merchandise. Held: In the absence of evidence that defendants' employee, after he placed the merchandise in the room through the window, failed to close and fasten the window, and that the thief entered the house because of such failure, plaintiff is not entitled to recover of defendants the value of the property stolen, and defendants' motion to nonsuit was properly allowed.

APPEAL by plaintiff from Rousseau, J., at April Term, 1937, of MECKLENBURG. Affirmed.

G. T. Carswell and Joe W. Ervin for plaintiff.

John Newitt for defendants.


This is an action to recover damages resulting from a wrongful and unlawful trespass by an employee of the defendants on property of the plaintiff while said employee of the defendants was acting within the scope of his employment.

From judgment dismissing the action as of nonsuit, C. S., 567, the plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court, assigning error in the judgment.


The facts shown by the evidence for the plaintiff at the trial of this action are as follows:

At about 2:15 p. m. on Thursday, 26 September, 1935, the plaintiff and his wife, who are residents of the city of Charlotte, N.C. purchased from the defendants at their store in said city a chair, paying for said chair the sum of $1.75. The plaintiff purchased the chair from the defendants on condition that the defendants would deliver the chair at the home of the plaintiff in the city of Charlotte during the afternoon of Thursday, 26 September, 1935. At the time of the purchase the plaintiff informed the defendants that both he and his wife would be at their home during the afternoon of Thursday, 26 September, 1935, but that neither of them would be at home during the next day. The defendants failed to deliver the chair at the home of the plaintiff during the afternoon of Thursday, 26 September, 1935.

Both plaintiff and his wife left their home at about 6:30 a. m. on Friday, 27 September, 1935. Before leaving they locked all the outside doors of their house and fastened all the windows by nails. Neither the plaintiff nor his wife returned to their home during the day. When the plaintiff returned home at about 8:15 p. m. that day he found the chair, which he and his wife had purchased of the defendant on the preceding day, sitting in a room in his house near a window which opened on a porch. It had rained during the day, first about 10 a. m. and again about 2 p. m. There were muddy tracks on the porch and in the house. The window opening on the porch from the room in which the chair was sitting was partly raised. The nail by which the plaintiff had fastened the window before he left home that morning had fallen and was lodged between the window frame and the window casing. All the other windows in the house were fastened and all the outside doors were locked, as they were when plaintiff left home that morning. There was nothing to indicate that the other windows in the house or the outside doors had been tampered with during the day while plaintiff and his wife were away from their home.

Upon investigation the plaintiff found that various articles of personal property, including about $500.00 in money, which were in the house when he and his wife left home that morning, were missing. The missing articles of personal property were worth about $660.75.

In his complaint the plaintiff prays judgment that he recover of the defendants as his actual damages the value of the missing articles of personal property, to wit, $660.75, and the sum of $1,000 as punitive damages.

On his appeal to this Court the plaintiff contends that there is error in the judgment of the Superior Court dismissing his action, for that the jury could have found by reasonable inference from the foregoing facts that the employee of the defendants who delivered the chair which he and his wife had purchased of the defendants on Thursday, 26 September, 1935, at his home on Friday, 27 September, 1935, wrongfully and unlawfully trespassed on his property, negligently failed to close the window which he had opened in order to place the chair in the room where plaintiff found it upon his return to his home at 8:15 p. m. on Friday, 27 September, 1935, and that said employee thereby made it possible for a thief to enter the house during the absence of the plaintiff and his wife and to steal and carry away the missing articles of personal property.

Conceding, without deciding, that the jury could have found, by reasonable inference from the facts shown by the evidence for the plaintiff that the employee of the defendants who delivered the chair at the home of the plaintiff some time during Friday, 27 September, 1935, wrongfully and unlawfully trespassed on plaintiff's property, we are of the opinion that the facts shown by the evidence for the plaintiff would not justify an inference by the jury that the employee of the defendants negligently failed to close the window which he had opened only for the purpose of placing the chair in the room where it was found by the plaintiff upon his return home after his absence during the day.

In no event is the plaintiff entitled to recover on the cause of action alleged in his complaint without proof that the employee of the defendants, who delivered the chair at plaintiff's home during his absence, negligently failed to close the window after he had opened it, whether wrongfully or not. It is not alleged in the complaint, nor was it contended by the plaintiff at the trial, that the employee of the defendant stole the missing articles of personal property. It is alleged in the complaint, and was contended by the plaintiff at the trial, that he is entitled to recover of the defendants the value of the missing articles because the wrongful act of the defendants' employee made it possible for a thief to enter the house and steal the missing articles of personal property. In the absence of evidence tending to show that the missing articles of personal property were stolen from plaintiff's house, during his absence, by a thief who entered the house because of the negligent failure of defendants' employee to close and fasten the window after he had placed the chair in the house, there is no error in the judgment dismissing the action as of nonsuit. The judgment is

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Catoe v. Baker

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Nov 1, 1937
193 S.E. 735 (N.C. 1937)
Case details for

Catoe v. Baker

Case Details

Full title:LONNIE CATOE v. ROBERT BAKER AND ROBERT BAKER, JR., TRADING AS BAKER SALES…

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Nov 1, 1937

Citations

193 S.E. 735 (N.C. 1937)
193 S.E. 735

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