210 P. 978 | Utah | 1922
Plaintiff brought this action against the defendant to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by her on account of the negligent operation of an automobile upon the streets of Salt Lake City. It is alleged in the complaint that the automobile was out of repair, and by reason of that and the careless and negligent manner in which it was driven by the agent or servant of the defendant it ran into and struck the plaintiff, causing her serious injuries of which she complains. The answer denies the allegations of the complaint, and for an affirmative defense alleges that if the plaintiff was injured in the manner complained of it was while the defendant’s agent was acting wholly outside the scope or course of his employment, and without fault of the defendant. After a trial to a jury judgment was duly entered upon a verdict in plaintiff’s favor. Defendant appeals.
He assigns many alleged errors as grounds for a reversal of the judgment. The principal errors, and those relied on in the brief and argument before this court, are as follows: (1) The denial of defendant’s motion for a nonsuit at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence; (2) certain instructions given to the jury; (3) the refusal to charge the jury as requested by the defendant; (4) the exclusion and admission of certain evidence over defendant’s objections; (5) the refusal to grant defendant’s motion for a new trial. It is also claimed as ground for a reyersal of the trial court’s judgement that the evidence was insufficient to justify a verdict in plaintiff’s favor.
It appears from the record that at the time of the accident complained of the defendant was engaged in operating a cleaning plant under the name and style of the Capitol
In the trial of the case, upon the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, proof had been received which tended to show that on June 21, 1921, the day of the accident, Pettigrew reported for duty at the defendant’s cleaning plant at about 8 o’clock a. m. He afterwards, about 9 o’clock a. m., drove out the defendant’s automobilé truck, which he had been accustomed to use in the performance of his duties or work, and proceeded to deliver and collect' clothes for the defendant’s cleaning plant. There was some conflict in the evidence as to the condition the truck was in at the time. According to the testmony of Pettigrew, the driver of the car, quoting from the evidence:
“The brakes wouldn’t work. When I would make a turn, if I got into tbe car track or anything like that, or have to come out from another automobile, the car would lock on me. * * ^ After I got in some place where I had to make a quick turn it made it kind of bad for me. When the wheels would go to one side and then lock and then swing to the other side I would get control ovqri it after I had gone a little ways. .* * * I told him [the he-fendant] it was hard to steer, and that the wheel turned over every once in a while. I don’t know as X said anything about locking. I just told him they turned over on me, and I would be liable to tip over. La Duke [defendant] said, ‘Be careful and do not let that happen.’ ”
The witness was unable to say just where he had been making calls to deliver and collect clothing that morning prior to the accident, except that he did say that he had
By reason of the facts and circumstances above stated, we think the ruling of the district court in denying defendant’s
After tbe motion for nonsuit bad been denied tbe evidence adduced in behalf of defendant tended to show, without going into detail, that tbe truck was in a fairly good condition of repair shortly before tbe accident. Defendant’s evidence also showed that tbe bundles of clothing, five in number, found in tbe car right after tbe accident, had all been gathered at places south of Seventh South street. None was found in tbe car belonging to the tailoring establishment on Second South street, from which place Pettigrew testified he had driven the car directly to the Deseret Bank building at the corner of First South and Main streets, for the purpose, of having his tooth treated, immediately prior to the accident. Defendant’s evidence also tended to show that Petti-grew’s district to work in was south of Seventh South street, and that he had been directed by the defendant not to use the truck for any other purpose than those connected with the work he had been employed to do for the defendant within the district assigned to.him.
Evidence in behalf of the plaintiff on rebuttal, however, tended to show that the defendant’s cleaning establishment had, prior to the accident in question, sent Pettigrew for bundles of clothing to the Oregon Short Line Railroad Depot, as far north as South Temple street, the Deseret Savings Bank building being on First South street on a direct line of travel following streets between said depot and defendant’s plant on State street. ■
After both sides had rested their case, the defendant moved for peremptory instructions, directing the jury to return a verdict as to each cause of action set forth in the complaint, no cause of action. These requests were refused by the trial court. The defendant also presented to the trial court certain requests that the jury be instructed to the
It has been strenuously argued and contended, both orally and in printed brief by defendant’s counsel, that the conduct of Pettigrew in driving the truck north of Seventh South street, and more especially in driving it from the tailoring establishment on Second South street to the Deseret Savings Bank building to have his tooth treated, were purely personal matters, in which the defendant’s servant was alone interested; that Pettigrew’s said acts were without the scope of his employment and nowise tended to further the business of defendant. The principal cases cited and relied upon by
We do not think the principles of law adhered to by the cases cited by defendant have any application to the facts and circumstances as disclosed by the record in the case at bar. Clearly, in no case cited by defendant was the servant engaged in the performance of the work he had been employed to do; nor was he promoting or furthering his master’s business.
Here, under the evidence, the question was left in doubt, and, under all the facts and circumstances it became, as has been pointed out, the province of the jury to say whether or not Pettigrew, at the time of the accident, was engaged in the prosecution or furtherance of the defendant’s business. Of course Pettigrew’s visit to the dentist was a purely personal matter, but right up to the time he parked the truck for that purpose he had been driving the truck from place to place in the city gathering clothes for the cleaning plant, and thereby was furthering the defendant’s business. After the short visit to the dentist upon his return to the truck, he backed it from the curb, and was again on his way to
True, Pettigrew made a slight deviation from a direct route to the defendant’s cleaning plant by driving to the Deseret Savings Bank, but, nevertheless, under all the facts and circumstances, we know of no principle of law that would justify the conclusion that by doing that he entirely abandoned or departed from his master’s employment. While he had, under the facts and circumstances, attended to a purely personal matter at the dentist’s office, nevertheless he had, when the accident happened, again assumed charge of and was 'operating the truck with the avowed intention and purpose of discharging the duties he owed to the defendant. Slight deviation from his duty under such circumstances, did not exempt his master from liability for his negligence in the event of accident. Barmore v. Vicksburg, S. & P. R. Co., 85 Miss. 426, 38 South. 210, 70 L. R. A. 627, 3 Ann. Cas. 594; Ritchie v. Waller, 63 Conn. 155, 28 Atl. 29, 27 L. R. A. 161, 38 Am. St. Rep. 361; Quinn v. Power Co., 87 N. Y. 535, 41 Am. Rep. 392; McKiernan v. Lehmaier, 85 Conn. 111, 81 Atl. 969 ;Schrayer v. Bishop & Lynns, 92 Conn. 677, 104 Atl. 349; Thomas v. Lockwood Oil Co., 174 Wis. 486, 182 N. W. 841; Slothower v. Clark, 191 Mo. App. 105, 179 S. W. 55; Gibson et al. v. Dupree, 26 Colo. App. 324, 144 Pac. 1133; Rahn v. Singer Mfg. Co. (C. C.) 26 Fed. 912; George v. Carstens Packing Co., 91 Wash. 637, 158 Pac. 529; Ferguson v. Reynolds, 52 Utah, 583, 176 Pac. 267.
We have tried to show that, ordinarily, in cases of this kind, the question of whether or not, the wrong complained of was committed within the scope of the servant’s employment is one primarily to be determined by the jury from the evidence in the particular case, more especially where there is doubt or conflicting evidence as to the authority
Tbe facts in this case are readily distinguishable from those in either Gousse v. Lowe, supra, or Cannon v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (60 Utah, 346), 208 Pac. 519, relied on by defendant, in which it was found by the courts that there had been a complete departure from, and the servants were not acting within, 'the scope of their employment nor in the furtherance of the master’s business when the accidents happened. In the Gousse Case a servant, in disobedience of his master’s express orders not to use an automobile for his own purposes, drove it more than 214 miles distant from the place where he had been directed to go or could have driven it in furtherance of his master’s business. While returning the automobile to the master after attending to a purely personal "matter by reason of the servant’s negligence, it collided with another, causing damage. The Supreme Court of California held that the act of the servant was not a slight deviation from his employment, but a substantial one, and therefore, in the absence of doubt or any conflicting evidence, the court reached the conclusion and found as a matter of law that the master was not liable for the damages. So, too, in the case of Cannon v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, supra, this court held as matter of law that, where a servant had driven a Ford truck at about the noon hour of a Saturday to a railroad station to deliver his master’s freight, after which it became the servant’s final duty under his employment for that day to immediately return the truck to the master’s garage, but in disobedience to orders took the’" truck for his own purposes, drove it to his home in an opposite direction blocks away, and retained it there while he assisted his wife in her household duties until 6 o’clock p. m., and then, while returning the truck and en route to his master’s garage, through negligence, caused injuries to another, the negligence of the servant was not attributable to the master.
In this connection the defendant also contends that the
“It is necessary, therefore, that you find as a matter of fact whether Pettigrew, at the time and place of the accident, was in fact acting within the scope of his employment. In this connection yon are instructed that it is not every deviation, however slight, that a servant may make from the strict execution of his employment, nor every disregard of his master’s instructions, that will he such an interruption .of the course of his employment as to relieve ¡his master from liability for the negligent acts of such servant, and the fact that the driver Pettigrew made a slight departure from the strict course of his employment at the time or immediately prior to the accident itself, if -you find that such departure was in fact made, is not of itself sufficient to relieve the defendant from liability for the injuries received by the plaintiff, if you find as a matter of fact that at the time and place of the accident Pettigrew was in fact acting within the general scope of his employment, and was then and there engaged in furthering the general purpose of his employment.”
For the reasons already stated we think this instruction when read and considered with the other instructions given by the court to the jury, correctly stated the law applicable to the evidence in the case.
With respect to the rulings of the trial court in the admission and rejection of certain testimony, we do not find that the trial court committed any prejudicial error in the rulings complained of by defendant.
The defendant also complains that the evidence in this ease was insufficient to support or justify the verdict of the jury. In making that assignment as a ground for reversal of the judgment, the particulars wherein the evidence was claimed to be insufficient were not pointed out by the defendant in his assignments of error, as required by our statutory and court rules of appellate procedure. Defendant has made application to amend his assignments in that regard. Having had to review and consider the entire evidence in connection with the other assignments properly made by defendant, his application to amend or supplement his assignments of error in this particular becomes immaterial, and therefore will not be passed upon by the court.
For the reasons heretofore stated, we are of the opinion
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court be, and the same is hereby, affirmed, with costs.