Court Opinion

ID: 7278553
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 20:03:13.093614+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:18:57.972884
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice Shepard
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The contract shows clearly, we think, a lease of the machines for the use of which defendant promises to pay in certain fixed instalments. The contract provided that the lessee might purchase tlie goods at the agreed value mentioned, in which event all sums previously paid ■ as rentals shall be credited on the purchase price. It is also stipulated that at the expiration of the time for which the goods are rented, and provided the lessee shall not pay for the same in full, as provided, lessee will return and deliver the same to the said company, and it shall have the right, without demand, to take possession of the said goods and remove the same. It further provides that when the lease is terminated the lessee shall not be entitled to any allowance, credit, return, or set-off for the payments made as rentals for the use of said goods, and for depreciation while in defendant’s possession. The parties were free at the time to; enter into any contract that they might agree upon.
The contention of the plaintiff is that the contract was a conditional sale; in other words, that the intention was a sale of the machines to defendant, who agreed to purchase at a fixed price, and that the sum agreed as rental was in .fact the purchase price.
The contention of the defendant is that it was a contract for hire, and nothing more.
Looking to the language employed, we think it plainly means a hiring. By its expressed terms it is a contract for hiring, and not of sale. Leasing the machines to defendant, it gave defendant the option to purchase in the future if he desired. Until he exercised his option it remained.a lease, and not a sale. The very question was before the court in London & B. *152S. Music House v. Dusenbury, 27 S. C. 464, 4 S. E. 60. The contract was similar to this. The court held that it was one of hiring, and not of sale. This decision was reaffirmed in Ludden & B. S. Music House v. Hornsby, 45 S. C. 111, 22 S. E. 781. The case upon which the appellee relies chiefly, Heryford v. Davis, 102 U. S. 235-244, 26 L. ed. 160-163, does not antagonize this conclusion.
The contract was ambiguous, and the court held that, instead of a contract for hire, it was one actually of conditional sale, with reservation of title. That this was the effect of the decision is stated by Mr. Justice Bradley in Harkness v. Russell, 118 U. S. 663, page 680, 30 L. ed. 285, 291, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 51. Ble says there: “The whole-question in Heryford v. Davis was as to the construction of the contract. This was in the form of a lease; but it contained provisions so irreconcilable with the idea of its being really a lease, and so demonstrable that it was an absolute sale with a reservation of a mortgage lien, that the latter interpretation was given to it by the court.”
In the present case the contract is plainly a lease providing for the delivery of the property, payment of rentals, and the return at the expiration of the lease. There are no irreconcilable provisions in the contract which could convert it into a sale, because the purchase was purely optional with the defendant. We think there is no question but that the .contract constituted a bailment for hire.
■ The next contention of the appellee is that, assuming it to be a lease contract, that the loss by accidental fire falls on the lessee, and not the lessor, because of the language of the lease, where it is provided, after receipting in good order and condition, the following: “Which I am to use with care and keep in like good order and condition.” It is argued that this condition makes it imperative upon the lessee to keep the property in good condition and return it in like order, and that it is analogous to the case of the contract for the lease of a house with condition, that the lessee shall keep it in repair. The rule *153in regard to the leasing of tenements is not applicable to the bailment for hire. In the latter case the bailee is liable only for ordinary care. Clark v. United States, 95 U. S. 539—542, 24 L. ed. 518, 519.
As is shown by the affidavit of defense, and not contradicted, the fire was accidental and wholly without fault of the bailee. The loss falls on the bailor. See also Swallow v. Emery, 111 Mass. 355.
The plaintiff: was not entitled to a summary judgment under the facts disclosed by the affidavit, and the same should have been submitted to the jury.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for trial; but if the plaintiff is content to accept the amount of rent instalments admitted to be due by the affidavit of the defendant, the court may render judgment therefor.

Reversed.

A motion by the appellee for a rehearing was denied May 27, 1916, Mr. Chief Justice Shepard delivering the opinion of the Court:
Appellee’s motion for rehearing cites for the first time the case of Sun Printing & Pub. Asso. v. Moore, 183 U. S. 642, 46 L. ed. 366, 22 Sup. Ct. Rep. 240, which it claims is decisive of the present case.
It has never been doubted that a bailee may enlarge his legal liability by express contract, and that case simply establishes that proposition. The facts, however, are quite different from these. The contract was for the hire of a yacht. It contained a number of stipulations, among them one liquidating the damages which would result from loss, and a number of other stipulations which the court held to put the positive duty on the hirer to surrender the vessel at the expiration of the charter, and to be responsible for the value even though impossibility of return was brought about without his fault.
It was stated by Mr. Justice White, who delivered the opin*154ion of the court, at page 656: “Pausing for a moment to consider the foregoing stipulations, it is difficult to conceive how language could more aptly express the absolute obligation, not only to repair and keep in good order to the end of the hiring and to return, but, moreover, to be responsible for any and all loss and damage to the vessel, her fixtures, and appointments. These stipulations seem to us to leave no doubt of the absolute liability to return; in other words, of the putting of the risk of damage or loss of the vessel upon the hirer. But if there could be doubt after considering the provisions just above referred to, such doubt is dispelled when it is considered that the contract proceeds to say that Tor the purpose of this charter the value of the yacht shall be considered and taken at the sum of $75,-000. And the said hirer shall procure security or guaranty to and for the owner’ in the sum stated To secure any and all loss and damage which may occur to said boat or its belongings which may be sustained by the owner by reason of such loss or damage and by reason of the breach of any of the terms or conditions of this contract.’ In other words, having provided for all repairs, having stipulated absolutely for the return of the vessel in full repair, having put the risk of any and all loss on the hirer, the contract then in express terms fixes the value of the vessel, and makes provision for security to protect against any and all loss or damage sustained by a failure of the hirer to fulfil each and all of the positive obligations which the contract imposed.”
We find nothing in that case which requires the reconsideration of the judgment heretofore rendered.
The motion for rehearing is denied, with costs.