Citation Numbers: 68 Fla. 499, 67 So. 143
Judges: Hocker, Shackleford, Taylor, Whitfield
Filed Date: 12/22/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
For the second time Chauncey Coombs has brought here for review by a writ of error a judgment recovered against him by R. R. Rice. For the opinion rendered on the former writ of error see Coombs v. Rice, 64 Fla. 202, 59 South. Rep. 958. As we have several times held, all the points adjudicated by an appellate court upon a writ of error or an appeal become the law of the case, and are no longer open for discussion or consideration, but this principle has no applicability to and is not decisive of points presented upon a second writ of error that were not presented upon the
“Where the allegations of a declaration show a relation of bailor and bailee for mutual benefit between the plaintiff and defendant, out of which relation there.arose a duty to use ordinary care for the preservation of a boat, the subject of the bailment, and state that the ‘defendant did, by his negligence in fastening said boat or vessel and leaving it unattended at a place exposed to imminent danger from fires, negligently permit said boat or vessel to be burned and destroyed by fire,’ a cause of action is stated, and in such a case a recovery must be predicated upon proof, by a preponderance of the evidence, of the burning of the boat as a result of the particular negligence alleged, viz: that the defendant was negligent in fastening the boat and leaving it unattended at the place where it was burned.
Where a bailment is for mutual benefit, the bailee is held to the exercise of ordinary care in relation to the subject-matter thereof, and is responsible only for ordinary negligence.
In an action to recover damages for a negligent injury to property, if the evidence does not support the specific allegations of negligence from which the injury proximately resulted, a verdict for the plaintiff is unauthorized and should be set aside.”
Judgment reversed.