115 So. 713 | Miss. | 1928
According to Pendergraft's evidence, he was in a restaurant near the mill at 5:30, when he was approached by Goldman, who told him that he and Burt wished to see him (Pendergraft) in the office; that he went into the mill, where he was assaulted and beaten by Burt in Goldman's presence, Goldman, at the time stating, "I will learn the son of a bitch how to make up a strike."
According to the evidence for the appellant, what Goldman did when he saw Pendergraft was to discharge him and tell him to report at the office, where he would be paid what the appellant owed him for services theretofore rendered, and that Burt thereafter struck Pendergraft under such circumstances as to impose no liability therefor on the appellant.
The purpose for which the declaration alleges that Goldman and Burt assaulted Pendergraft was "in order to further their master's business of securing labor as cheaply as possible, and in order to prevent any attempt on the part of the employees to band themselves together, or an attempt to secure an increase in wages, and in order to intimidate all of said employees so that they could control them more easily, unlawfully and willfully entered into a conspiracy to entice the plaintiff back to said mill and unlawfully beat and batter him." *602
The appellant contends that it was entitled to a directed verdict for two reasons: (1) The overwhelming weight of the testimony supports Goldman's version of the assault; and (2) that if the assault was made on Pendergraft as claimed by him, that Goldman and Burt in making it, were not acting in the course of their employment, and in furtherance of the appellant's business.
Pendergraft's version of the manner and circumstances under which the assault on him was made was supported by evidence sufficient to require its submission to the jury, so we come, at once, to the appellant's second contention.
Burt's relation to the appellant will be here left out of view, and the liability vel non of the appellant will be determined in the light of Goldman's relation to it.
There was necessarily included in Goldman's duty to employ and discharge the appellant's laborers, and to fix the amount of their wages, the further duty to employ laborers for such wages as would enable the appellant to realize a just profit on its investment. One method of doing this would be to induce or prevent these laborers from demanding, or, after demanding, from insisting on, an increase in wages over that fixed by Goldman, and for which they had agreed to work. If the assault on Pendergraft was participated in by Goldman, and was for the purpose of intimidating the appellant's employees, and thereby prevent them from demanding an increase in wages, or prevent those who had demanded an increase in wages from insisting thereon, which questions were for the determination of the jury, then the assault was made in the course of, and as a means to, the accomplishment of one of the purposes of Goldman's employment, and therefore in the course of and in furtherance of his master's business.
It does not appear that the appellant specifically authorized Goldman to employ violence in inducing the laborers to be content with their wages; nevertheless, the *603
appellant is liable for the use which the jury here found was made by him of violence for that purpose. If the act complained of was in furtherance of the master's business, and within the course of the servant's employment, the master will be liable therefor, although it was in excess of the authority conferred by the master on the servant (39 C.J. 1285) and was wilfully and maliciously done (Richberger v. Exp. Co.,
Affirmed.