106 Mo. App. 591 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
In September, 1902, Mrs. Atherton, the plaintiff, who lived at 1308 Holmes street, in Kansas City, ordered of the defendant coal company four tons of coal to be delivered at her house. On Sep-' tember 9, 1902, a driver appeared upon the premises with the first load of coal, containing two -tons, the coal being in a wagon which bore a painted sign of the defendant company. Mrs. Atherton instructed the teamster to drive to the alley and put the coal in a coalhouse standing upon the rear of the lot upon this alley. The coalhouse was divided into two compartments, one, the south, being used by Mrs. Atherton, and the other, the north, being used by a neighbor. There was a connecting door between these - compartments. Mrs. Atherton went into the coalhouse used by her and raised the door
It was claimed that the teamster was guilty of negligence in throwing in the coal.
For the purposes of this case it may be assumed that he was negligent, yet, notwithstanding this, the defendant was not liable as the teamster was not acting within the scope of his duty. In such cases the servant and not the master is liable. Wood on Master & Servant, see. 279; Walker v. Railway, 121 Mo. 575. The teamster at the time was under the direction of the plaintiff and not that of his employer. It was not in the contemplation of the defendant when the teamster was directed to haul the coal and deliver it to plaintiff, that she would superintend its unloading. She voluntarily put herself in a place of peril and thereby assumed the risk attending the unloading of the coal in the ordinary way — and the evidence shows that there was nothing unusual in the method used by the teamster in doing so. The defendant owed her no duty whatever, and its peremptory instruction should have been given.
Reversed.