128 Tenn. 307 | Tenn. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the Court.
There was evidence tending to show the following facts: Defendant in error was first employed in the .store of the D. B. Loveman Company as a bundle wrapper, and while he was in this employment fifty cents was missed, which the company’s.agents-supposed he had appropriated. He was called, taken aside,, and told that a sale slip with the money had been traced to his balcony, and it could not he found in the cashier’s possession, to which it was his duty to deliver it. He replied that it would appear as if he had it, and' suggested that they search him. They did so, and found nothing. Shortly after this he was placed in charge of a room containing what was called the reserve stock; that from which the various departments of the store were,' from time to time, replenished. About three weeks after he took charge of this reserve stock a head of one of the departments dis
The point sustained by the court of civil appeals, and presented there by an assignment of error in due form was in substance as follows:
That the verdict in favor of plaintiff in errors’ servants who alone committed the acts complained of, if they were committed at all, for the commission of which plaintiff in error was sued, as their master, or principal, under the rule of respondeat superior, under which alone plaintiff in. error could be held liable if at all, rendered the verdict against plaintiff in error
In the petition for the writ of certiorari and accompanying brief the defendant in error denies the soundness of the contention, and also insists that, even if sound, it is not available to plaintiff in error because no error was assigned to the effect that there was no evidence to support the verdict.
Defendant in error insists that, conceding the soundness of the rule of law involved, still to make it available it is necessary to examine the evidence to ascertain whether there was any testimony that would hold plaintiff in error, notwithstanding the verdict in favor of its servants. On the other hand, plaintiff in error insists that it is necessary to refer to the facts only to test the applicability of the legal rule invoked, just as the correctness, or incorrectness, of a charge is tested by reference to the facts to ascertain the applicability of such charge or instructions.
To determine these controversies it is essential that we state the rule. It is, in substance, this:
When the master is sued solely for misfeasance, or nonfeasance, on the part of his servants, being liable for their conduct only under the doctrine of respondeat -,superior, a verdict, permitted to stand in favor of such servants, either in an action where they are sued with the master, or in a prior action, entitles the master to a discharge from such claimed liability. This
Illustrating the point: In Doremus v. Root, it was held that, in an action against a railroad company and its conductor for an injury caused by the alleged negligence of the conductor, a verdict in favor of the latter would preclude a judgment against the company. In McGinnis v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., the action was based on the' negligence of one French, a servant of the company employed in bridgework on the line. A verdict was rendered in favor of French, but against the company. It was held that in view of the former verdict the latter could not be sustained. In Indiana Nitroglycerine, etc., Co. v. Lippincott Glass Co., it appeared that the action was based solely on the negligence of a servant, and both he and the,master were'
The case of Moore v. Fitchburg R. Co., 4 Gray (Mass.), 465, 64 Am. Dec., 83 is cited as in conflict with the general doctrine. In that case it is true the court said it had nothing to do with the inconsistency of the verdict. However, the question covered by the cases, above cited does not seem to have been in the mind of the court. I. C. R. R. Co. v. Murphy, 123 Ky., 787, 97 S. W., 729, 11 L. R. A. (N. S.), 352, is in conflict with the doctrine, and G., C. & S. F. R. Co. v. James, 73
The last proposition leads to the statement of a differentiation of the general doctrine we have been considering, to the following effect. If the evidence shows liability of the master on grounds other than the misconduct of his servant, he may be held, notwithstanding a verdict in favor of the servant. This principle was recognized in Jones v. Seattle, 51 Wash., 245, 98 Pac., 743; Aldrich v. Inland Empire Co., supra, and Clay v. Chicago, Milwaukee. & St. Paul Railway Co., 104 Minn., 1, 115 N. W., 949. In the case last cited there were two grounds of liability considered, the too great proximity of the depot platform to the passing cars, and the negligence of the conductor. The jury
The defendant in error insists there is other evidence in the record to sustain the liability of plaintiff in error aside from the conduct of D. B. Loveman and D. 0. Seymour, who were exonerated by the jury. It is insisted that there were two other agents of plaintiff in error who were not sued, Bratton and Campbell who assisted in inflicting the injuries upon defendant in error that are complained of, and that no estoppel in respect of their complicity arises out of the verdict. This is certainly a proper inquiry for the purpose of determining the applicability to the present case of the rule of law we- have been considering. But to enable us to inquire, and also to enable us to determine generally that there is no evidence to support the verdict against the plaintiff in error aside from that which applied to the conduct of D. B. Loveman and D. C. Seymour, it is essential that we examine the evidence. But we are met by the rule that the supreme court cannot test the validity of a verdict by the evidence, except upon an assignment that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict, and there is no such assignment in the case before us. This rule is so well settled in this State that it needs no citation of authority. There being no such assignment, we cannot go into the evidence to see whether the case is of such
It results that the judgment of the court of civil appeals must be reversed, and that of the trial judge affirmed.