25 N.M. 632 | N.M. | 1920
OPINION OF THE COURT
On May 1, 1916, appellant, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of New Mexico for carrying- on a general merchandising business, was the owner of a store building in the town of Boy, N. M. Adjoining- the store building it had a lumber yard and corral. The lumber yard was used for storing lumber, and consisted of sheds extending from the warehouse of the store to a frame dwelling house, 48 feet long and one story high, occupied on the date mentioned by Mrs. Antonia Pacheco. Across the street from the lumber yard and store of the appellant company was a building owned by appellee and used by him for the purpose of conducting a saloon. About 10 o’clock on May 1, 1916, the house occupied by Mrs. Pacheco and the lumber yard and store owned and used by the Floersheim Mercantile Company were destroyed by fire. The fire spread across the street from the lumber yard and store of appellant and destroyed the business house of the appellee, together with other property.
Appellee instituted this action in the court below for the purpose of recovering damages from the appellant for the destruction of his property by the fire. The complaint proceeded upon two theories by. separate counts: First, that the appellant corporation negligently failed to confine the fire to its own premises; second, that the fire was purposely started on the property of the appellant corporation by its officers or agents for the purpose of destroying the property of the Floersheim Mercantile Company, the alleged object being to collect on fire insurance policies on the property. Upon issue joined, the ease was tried to a jury and a verdict was returned in favor of the appellee, assessing his damages at the value of the building destroyed by fire.
At the conclusion of the evidence for the appellee appellant moved for an instructed verdict, which was denied, and later at the conclusion of its evidence the court was again asked to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the appellant, which was likewise denied. The verdict of the jury, and the judgment of the court are here attacked upon several grounds, some of which, in view of our conclusion, need not be considered.-
The main point of attack is the failure of the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the appellant. The motion for a directed verdict went to both counts of the complaint, and appellee argues that if there was evidence justifying the submission of either count to the jury -the action of the court was proper. This is controverted by appellant. Appellant argues, however, that there is no evidence justifying the submission of either count to the jury, and a disposition of this question necessarily requires a consideration of the facts in the case.
(1) Knowledge of the existence of the fire on the company’s premises must have been brought home to some responsible officer of the company.
(2) The spreading of the fire from the company’s premises must have been preventable by the use of ordinary diligence.
(3) The company must have failed to use ordinary diligence to prevent the fire from spreading.
(4) The burning of appellee’s property must have been due to this lack of diligence on the part of the company.
We have carefully read the evidence in the case and find no evidence whatever justifying - the submission to the jury of the question of the negligence of appellant in preventing the spread of the fire.
It is next contended by appellant that there was likewise no evidence to the effect that the fire was purposely started by an officer, agent, or .employe of the appellant company. The only evidence going to establish this fact was the testimony of the appellee to the effect that a day or so after the fire Mr. Floersheim, president of the appellant company, said to him that Mr. Alldredge, the vice president and general manager of the appellant company, had intended to advise Archuleta to insure his property, but that he, Floersheim, did not think that this fire would reach Archuleta’s property. There were some other facts •testified to by various witnesses for the appellee, which, it is argued, present circumstances which afford substantial evidence of the starting of the fire purposely by appellant’s agents or servants. A statement of a few of the circumstances will show the lack of merit of this contention. For example, one witness testified that shortly before the fire he saw Mr. Floersheim, president of the company, walking along the side of the lumber yard and saw him enter the warehouse of the appellant company, another testified that he purchased a tractor from the Floersheim Mercantile Company and gave back a mortgage to the company to secure the larger part of the purchase price. The witness left the tractor on the street in front of a moving picture house. There had been a fire in the picture house two weeks before the conversation and Mr. Alldredge told the witness that he should not leave the tractor in front of the moving picture theatre as it might be destroyed by fire. The theatre was located next to the Archuleta saloon. Another witness testified that on the morning of the fire Mr. Floersheim went to the Pacheco house and asked two of the girls of Mrs. Pacheco to clean up his room; he having a room where he stayed while in Roy. There were two other small children in the house at the time which were left there..
None of these circumstances, as we view them, afforded any probative force whatever. There was certainly nothing even supicious about Mr. Floersheim walking alongside of the lumber yard and entering the warehouse. When Mr. Alldredge asked the purchaser of the tractor to remove it from in front of the moving picture theatre he was taking simply ordinary precaution to protect property upon which the company had a lien. It is absurd to suppose that Mr. Floersheim would seek to get the two older Pacheco girls out of the house and leave remaining there two children, one of whom was not able to protect itself in case of fire. Evidence as to what Mr. Floersheim said to Archuleta long after the fire occurred was no part of the res gestee and would clearly not be binding upon the appellate corporation, but, as it was admitted without objection, it might be that it would afford some evidence as to culpability on the part of Mr. Floersheim or Mr. Alldredge as to the starting of the fire. The evidence on behalf of the appellant was overwhelming to the effect that the only fire was the one originating in the Pacheco house, with which clearly the appellant had no connection. We do not base a reversal of this case, however, upon the insufficiency of the evidence in this regard, but upon another proposition, which is controlling.
Even if it be assumed that the fire was deliberately started by a person who held office in the corporate organization, his act would not be that of the company, under the circumstances in this case, and the company would not be liable. The corporation was organized under the laws of this state for the. purpose of carrying on a mercantile business, that is, it was engaged in buying and selling general merchandise, lumber, and other articles. Mr. Sol Ploersheim was the president of the company and Mr. Alldredge was the vice president and general manager. There was no evidence introduced in the case as to the duties of either of these officers, but if it be assumed for the sake or argument that their duties were such as ordinarily devolve upon such officers, it would be a most violent presumption to suppose that in the performance of such duties they were required to burn up and destroy the property of the corporation. The evidence shows, without dispute, that while the property was insured, yet the company suffered a loss of $12,000 over and above the insurance collected. The liability of the company, assuming for the sake of argument that the fire was purposely started by either Mr. Floersheim, its president, or Mr. Alldredge, its general manager, must depend upon the question as to whether the act of starting the fire and burning the property was in the course of the employment of the president or general manager of the company. In other words, was the function which the servant was discharging at the time when the tort was committed a function which was within the range of the contract of hiring or employment, or which had been allotted to either of the parties after they commenced the performance of their duties ?
“If this question is answered in the negative, the master’s nonliability is obviously a necessary inference, even though the act from which the plaintiff’s injury resulted was done with the view to benefiting the master.” Labatt’s Master and Servant (2d Ed.) § 2274.
Of course if the evidence in the case showed that it' was a part of the duties of either of these officials to burn up and destroy the property of the corporation in whose services they were engaged, for the purpose of collecting the insurance, or for any other object, their act in doing so would be within the course of their employment and the master would be liable. At section 2286 the same author says:
“With respect to cases where the only reasonable conclusions from the rest of the evidence is that the act complained of was done outside the scope of the servant’s employment, the authorities show’ clearly that the mere circumstances of its having been done with the intention of furthering- the master’s business will not render the master responsible to the party aggrieved by it.”
“It has been held, in a great variety of cases, that the master is liable for the wanton or malicious acts of his servant if they were committed while the servant was acting in the execution of his authority and within the course of his employment.”
The Supreme Court of the United States expresses negatively the same principle in Washington Gaslight Co. v. Lansden, 172 U. S. 544, 19 Sup. Ct. 300, 43 L. Ed. 543, as follows:
•‘The result of the authorities is, as we think, that in order ■to hold a corporation liable for the torts of any of its agents, the act in question must be performed in the course and within the scope of the agent’s employment in the business of the principal. The corporation can be held responsible for acts which are not strictly within the corporate powers, but which were assumed to be performed for the corporation and by the corporate agents who were competent to employ the corporate powers actually exercised. There need be no written authority under seal nor vote of -the corporation constituting the agency or authorizing the act. But in the absence of evidence of this nature there must be evidence of some facts from • which the authority of the agent to act upon or in relation to the subject-matter involved may be fairly and legitimately inferred by the court or jury.”
In Salt Lake City v. Hollister, 118 U. S. 256, 6 Sup. Ct. 1055, 30 L. Ed. 176, the court quotes the rule from Philadelphia, etc., Ry. Co. v. Quigley, 21 How. 202, 16 L. Ed. 73, as follows:
“The result of the cases is that for acts done by the agents of a corporation, .either in contractu or in delicto, in the course of its business and of their employment, the corporation is responsible as an individual is responsible under similar circumstances.”
The question of the liability of a company for the tortious act of its agent therefore narrows itself down to whether the act was done “in the execution of his authority, and within the course of his employment.” These words also are defined by this court in Childers v. Southern Pacific Co., as follows, quoting from Mechem on Agency:
“But in general terms it may be said that an act is within the ‘course of employment’ if (1) it be something fairly and naturally incident to the business, and if (2) it be done while the servant was engaged upon the master's business and be done, although mistakenly or ill-advisedly, with a view to further the master’s interest, or from some impulse or emotion which naturally grew out of or was incident to the at-, tempt to perform the master’s business, and did not arise wholly from some external, independent, and personal motive on the part of the servant to do the act upon his own account.”
Tested by this rule, there certainly can be no claim that if Mr. Floersheim set fire to the company’s property he did so in the execution of his authority or within the scope of his employment under the company. Such an act was not “fairly and naturally incident to the busi-. ness” of the company. It was not done “with a view to further the master’s interest. ” If he did it he stepped aside from his employment for that purpose, and instead of his act being with the view of furthering the company’s interest it was for a purpose exactly opposite, for it was to the detriment of his employer, not to its advantage. From the very nature of the act it could not have “grown out of" or been “incident to the attempt to perform the master’s business," and if the act was done it must have arisen “wholly from some- external, independent, and personal motive” on the part of Mr. Floersheim to do the act upon his own account. If Mr. Floersheim abandoned his duty as the protector of the company’s property and willfully became its destroyer, as appellee claimed, he necessarily abandoned his employment, and the company is no more liable for his action than for that of any other malicious trespasser.
In Washington Gaslight Co. v. Lansden surpa, the question was as to the liability of the company for a libel contained in letters written by its general manager. The letters contained a matter in which the company was interested and they were copied into the company’s letter book. In reversing a judgment rendered against the company, the Supreme Court of the United States held that the company was not responsible for the acts of its manager. That case is identical in principle with the present one. In the course of the discussion the court said:
“In this case no specific authority was pretended to have been given the g-eneral manager, Reetch, to write the letters which he sent to Brown, or to authorize the publication of anything whatever in the periodical named. We are "then limited to an inquiry whether the evidence is sufficient upon which a jury might be permitted to base an inference that Beetch had the necessary authority to act for the company in this business. If different inferences might fairly be drawn from the evidence by reasonable men, then the jury should be permitted to choose for themselves. But if only one inference could be drawn from the evidence, and that is a want of authority, then the question is a legal one for the court to decide. We do not mean that in order to render the company liable there must be some evidence of authority, express or implied, given to the manager to publish or to authorize the publishing- of a libel, but there must be some evidence from which an authority might be implied on the part of the manager to represent the company as within the general scope of his employment, in regard to the subject-matter of the correspondence between Brown and himself. There is no evidence of an express authority, nor of any subsequent ratification of Reetch’s conduct by the company. Can any authority be inferred from the evidence as to the nature of the duties and powers oí the manager? Were the acts of Leetch within the general scope of his employment as manager? Upon a careful perusal of the whole evidence we And nothing upon which such an inference can be based; nothing to show that any correspondence whatever, upon' the subject in hand, was within the scope of the manager’s employment.”
Later in its opinion the court said:
“If we set aside for a moment the testimony in regard to the duties to be performed by the superintendent, as stated in the communication of March, 1865, and look simply at the other facts in the case, we are still without evidence from which it might be inferred that the act on the part of the manager was within the scope of his employment. The burden is upon, the plaintiff to show this fact. * “ We are of opinion that the court erred in submitting to the jury the question whether Leetch, in respect to the subject of the letters written by him to Brown, had authority to bind the company. The coui't should have directed a verdict for the corporation on the ground that there was an entire lack of evidence upon which to base a verdict against it.”
The foregoing language is applicable to this case. The burden was upon the plaintiff here to show that Mr. Floersheim or some other agent of the company started the fire, and that in so doing he was acting within the scope of his employment. Appellant failed to do so, and his case necessarily fell with his failure.
In the case of Collins v. Alabama Great Southern Railroad Co., 104 Ala. 390, 16 South. 140, it was the contention that an employe of the railroad company had set fire to the warehouse in which the plaintiff’s goods were stored. The court said:
“But there was no evidence tending to' show if Ellis did set fire to it, that it was a negligent act of his done while in the perforance of his duty. If he did it at all, it was his own toritous, wicked act, done outside the line of his employment, in which the defendant did not participate, or afterwards in any manner ratify, and for which it is not, in any wise, responsible. It is well settled that if an agent go beyond the range of his employment or duties, and of his own will do an unlawful act injurious to another, he, and not his employer, is liable.”
From the above it necessarily follows that there was no evidence in the ease establishing the liability of the appellant corporation, for which reason the court should have sustained appellant’s motion for an instructed verdict.
For the reasons stated, the cause is reversed and remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion; and
It is so ordered.