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(STANLEY
COULTHARD SR. |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(JOHN
ARMSTRONG |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 2 of 1983
6th July, 1984
Rajasingham, J.
Mr. N.
Dujon, for the Plaintiff.
Mr. J.C. Gray, for the Defendant.
Tort
- Plaintiff suing Defendant for $724 for tools lost by Defendant
- Whether Defendant's negligence resulted in the loss of
the tools - Plaintiff filing action one and a half years
after being informed of loss of tools.
J
U D G M E N T
The Plaintiff's
claim is for a sum of $724.00 with interest and costs, as
being the value of a box of tools which belonged to the Plaintiff
and which he accepts was lost from the Defendant's vehicle.
The Defendant denies liability on the basis that it was lost
without any lack of care on his part and that the Plaintiff
had accepted that that was so and relieved him of all responsibility
therefor.
The evidence
showed that the Defendant, at the request of the Plaintiff,
agreed to rent the Plaintiff's house for a maximum period
of three months at a rental of $200.00 per month. It was further
agreed that the Defendant would look after the Plaintiff's
animals, including some pigs. In order to do that the Defendant
had to travel ten and a half miles to the Don Quixote Hotel
at Consejo twice a week to pick up refuse food to feed the
Plaintiff's pigs. Since the house was in San Andres, the Defendant
had to travel to Corozal for supplies. When this came up in
their discussions, the Plaintiff and the Defendant agreed
that the Defendant would purchase the Plaintiff's pick-up
for this purpose. The Plaintiff stated that he was uncertain
of the year of make of the vehicle, but thought it was 1976.
The Defendant said that the vehicle often gave trouble and
he suffered a lot of inconvenience on the Consejo Road. The
road itself, he said, was in a very bad state of repair. On
the conclusion of the agreement, the Defendant says the Plaintiff,
when asked "What about the tool box?", said "Go
ahead, everything in the house is yours to use". Defendant
said he asked this question because the tool box was kept
in the Plaintiff's bedroom when it was not in use, and the
Defendant did not wish to enter that room in the Plaintiff's
absence. It is easy to accept this magnanimous statement on
the part of the Plaintiff because the Plaintiff, who on earlier
visits abroad had suffered loss through neglect of his property,
had on this occasion, made what seemed a very advantageous
arrangement. Besides, as the Defendant pointed out in his
evidence, the tools were required for ordinary maintenance
around the premises; they would undoubtedly also be required,
even if only as a stand-by, on the runs to Consejo to fetch
food for the Plaintiff's pigs. I have set out the pertinent
evidence and make no reference to such extraneous matters
as the bank loan, etc.
The Defendant
described the circumstances in which the tools were stolen.
He said he set out, later than usual, to Consejo so that on
his return he and his wife and sister-in-law could stop at
the cinema and then return home. He did not wish to return
home and then go to the cinema as their departure and thus
the fact of the house being unoccupied may have been noted
by burglars. The pick-up was secured and the tool box was
placed out of sight behind the metal front of the rear seat.
He parked the vehicle in a well lit up area within hundred
yards of the theatre. Upon his return, he found the vehicle
had been broken into and the tool box was missing. He promptly
reported the matter to the Police, but the tools were never
recovered.
The Defendant
says that when the Plaintiff returned, he gave the Plaintiff
a full written accounting of his stewardship and told him
of the death of his dog and a rabbit and the loss of the tool
box. He says the accounts showed that the Plaintiff owed him
about $40.00. He had asked the Plaintiff to bring him some
books. The Plaintiff had brought them and upon being told
all this and being shown the accounts, said "Thank God
my Mayan artifacts are safe" and wrote "$20.00 US"
on a receipt which he had said were for the books, and gave
it to Defendant saying "We are quits".
I have
no hesitation in saying that I prefer the evidence of the
Defendant to that of the Plaintiff. I was struck by the disparity
between the two men, the Defendant so gullible and the Plaintiff
so sharp. I do not for a moment believe the Plaintiff when
he says he did not give the Defendant permission to use the
tools. The tools were required almost entirely for the Plaintiff's
purposes. They were required for use in an emergency on the
road to and from Consejo to pick up the swill for the Plaintiff's
pigs. On the day in question they had been taken along for
that same purpose. The Defendant when he stopped for a purpose
of his own, had placed the tool box out of sight and had locked
the vehicle and left it parked in a well lit area. I cannot
see how he could have taken any greater precautions, short
of leaving a person to stand guard over the vehicle and its
contents. Such an extreme precaution would, in my opinion,
not be reasonable in those circumstances.
The Plaintiff
filed an Action a year and a half after his return to Belize
and after his being told of the loss. I am satisfied that
he was told of the loss immediately upon his return. This
long delay seems to lend credence to the Defendant's statement
that, after he had been told of the loss, the Plaintiff considered
that they were quits. In view of the losses he had described
to the Defendant as those suffered by him on earlier visits
abroad, he undoubtedly considered himself lucky when he heard
of the few losses he had suffered and had obviously been satisfied
that they were losses that had not been caused by a lack of
care on the part of the Defendant. I cannot imagine what made
him file Action one and a half years later.
I am satisfied
that the Defendant had express permission to use the tools
because they were required to ensure the supply of pig swill
from Consejo. I am also satisfied that they were put in the
pick-up that day for that purpose and that, when he went to
the cinema, he took all such precautions as a reasonable man
would take to ensure the safety of the tools.
I therefore
dismiss the Plaintiff's Action with costs.
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