162 S.W.2d 813 | Mo. | 1942
Lead Opinion
In this reassigned cause the Kroger Grocery Baking Company appeal from a $10,000.00 personal injury judgment in favor of Dorothy Devine.
The suit was originally against Kroger Grocery Baking Company, Henry Boemler, the manager of the store at Eureka, Missouri, and John Fromm, the owner of the building. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the respondent's petition as to Fromm and the case was then dismissed as to him. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Boemler and against the appellant. The appellant now contends that plaintiff's petition stated a cause of action based on the principle of respondeat superior and therefore the jury's verdict exonerating Boemler, who was in complete control and management of the store, and fixing liability on the appellant is inconsistent, a nullity and cannot stand, the agent or servant being found not guilty of negligence the jury could not find Kroger Grocery Baking Company negligent.
The petition alleges that "Kroger Grocery Baking Company . . . was at all times herein mentioned engaged in the general retail grocery business throughout the United States and particularly in the City of Eureka, Missouri, where it maintained a retailgrocery store and invited the general public to make purchases and do business therein; that . . . Henry Boemler was the agent and servant and general manager, and as such was in charge of the said grocery store . . . and as such was charged with the general supervision and care of the said store and with the safety of persons lawfully doing business therein . . ." The respondent's petition then alleges that on September 2, 1937, she was "a customer and invitee of defendant corporation and Boemler in said store" . . . and "was permanently injured as a direct result ofthe concurring *630 negligence and carelessness of all the defendants." Then follow five separate paragraphs specifically setting forth the particular conduct complained of. Four of them charge: "Thatdefendants negligently and carelessly failed and omitted to exercise ordinary care to inspect the said exit and the board and hole" . . . and "failed and omitted to warn plaintiff of the existence of said hole in said doorway" . . . and "omitted to fill up or block said hole." The second specific charge is "thatdefendant corporation and defendant Boemler negligently and carelessly failed and omitted to exercise ordinary care to furnish persons, [816] particularly plaintiff, with a reasonably safe place in which to do business and a reasonably safe exit from said store, in that defendants negligently caused, suffered and permitted the board aforesaid to be placed across the passageway of said exit, and did negligently and carelessly permit a hole to exist in the floor of said store . . ." She then says: "all of the injuries and conditions hereinafter mentioned occurred as a direct result of the concurringnegligence of all defendants in constructing, maintaining andpermitting the said condition to exist . . ."
The respondent submitted and the court gave two instructions, one on the measure of damages and the other on liability. The one hypothesizing respondent's theory of liability says: ". . . thatdefendant Kroger Company at the time of the occurrence in question . . . was engaged in the grocery business in Eureka, Missouri, at the store mentioned in evidence, and that defendant Boemler was the manager of said store and in charge thereof, and that at the exit of said store . . . was a hole, . . . and the presence thereof made the said floor dangerous and not reasonably safe for persons using the same, and that defendantsknew . . . of said hole . . . and that plaintiff was a customer of the defendant . . . and that defendants were guilty of negligence in permitting said condition to exist . . . and in failing . . . to fill up or block same . . . and in failing to warn plaintiff . . . and that if plaintiff was injured as a direct result of such negligence" . . . she was entitled to recover.
The court gave the jury three forms of verdict. One permitted the jury to find "against both defendants," one permitted the jury to find "in favor of both defendants" and the one the jury used permitted a verdict "against the defendant Kroger Grocery Baking Company" and "in favor of the defendant Henry Boemler."
The hole complained of appears to have been inherent in the construction of the floor and doorsill. It was three and one-half inches long and five-eighths of an inch wide and had been there for at least five years. Other substantive facts, in so far as they bear on this question, are about as alleged in the petition and as stated in the respondent's principal instruction. However, there is no direct evidence as to the nature and extent of Boemler's authority and duties except *631 his statement that he was manager and "in charge of" the store. Claude Woodworth, a clerk, did say it was a part of his duty to look after the safety of the floor and to prevent customers from getting hurt.
The given instruction on the burden of proof, offered by the appellant, covered, in general terms, both defendants. Its instruction on the duty of storekeepers concluded by saying: "Then you cannot find that the defendants, or either of them, were negligent in maintaining said floor and doorsill."
There is no objection to the form or manner in which the question of the defendants' liability was submitted to the jury. The appellant's theory here is that it could only be held because it was the employer of Boemler and as such liable for his negligence as manager of the store, therefore the jury's verdict exonerating him absolved and exculpated it of the charge of negligence requiring a reversal of this judgment.
[1] Although there is some diversity of opinion as to whether damages may be recovered against an employer whose liability is wholly dependent on his servant's having been negligent — or the doctrine of respondeat superior — after the servant has been discharged of personal liability there is and can be no question but that we have adopted and followed the rule of non-liability in such cases. "Thus, according to the weight of authority, where employer and employee are joined as parties defendant in an action for injuries inflicted by the employee, a verdict which exonerates the employee from liability for injuries caused solely by the alleged negligence or misfeasance of the employee requires also the exoneration of the employer, and although the verdict purports to hold the employer liable, it cannot form the basis of a judgment against the employer, but must be set aside." [35 Am. Jur., Sec. 534, p. 962; 78 A.L.R. 365; 54 L.R.A. 649, 30 L.R.A. (N.S.) 404; Stoutimore v. Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co.,
Although an agent, whether he be a manager or a mere employee, is subject to liability if he personally breaches his duty to others protected against negligent invasion (2 Restatement Law of Agency, Secs. 350, 353, 354) and although the principal, whether he be a master or an employer, may be liable for the acts of his agent (1 Restatement Law of Agency, Sec. 213; 2 Restatement Law of Agency, Sec. 470) the principle of respondeat superior as used and applied here with reference to the liability of the master is a doctrine of the substantive law of torts and not of the substantive law of agency. "Liability exists only if all the requirements of an action of tort for negligence exist." [1 Restatement Law of Agency, p. 464; 3 Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal History, pp. 377-390.]
This fact is important in the disposition of this case because liability of the appellant, Kroger Grocery Baking Company, ultimately depends on the substantive law of torts and not on the substantive law of agency or respondeat superior. If all the requisites of a tort action against the appellant are present it would be liable regardless of the liability of its manager and his exoneration by the jury. "If the liability of the master isnot predicated solely upon the negligence of the employee in whose favor a verdict has been found, but upon the negligence
of another employee, or that of the employer himself, a verdict against the employer is not inconsistent. A verdict in favor of an employee does not bar recovery against the *633
employer where the latter has himself been guilty of acts on which, independently of acts of the employee, liability may be predicated." [35 Am. Jur., Sec. 534, p. 963; Stith v. Newberry Co., supra; Stoutimore v. Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co., supra.] In other words, if the defendants — the owner on the one hand and its manager on the other — are under different legal duties to the plaintiff which he or it breaches then liability arises irrespective of respondeat superior and regardless of the distinctions which may be made as to joint tort-feasors, malfeasance and nonfeasance and the possibility of other servants being responsible for the injury and conduct in question. [See and compare: Lindman v. Kansas City,
[2] In this case the applicable substantive law of torts is as follows, 2 Restatement Law of Torts, Sec. 343:
"A possessor of land is subject to liability for bodily harm caused to business visitors by a natural or artificial condition thereon if, but only if, he (a) knows, or by the exercise of reasonable care could discover, the condition which, if known to him, he should realize as involving an unreasonable risk to them, and (b) has no reason to believe that they will discover the condition or realize the risk involved therein, and (c) invites or permits them to enter or remain upon the land without exercising reasonable care (I) to make the condition reasonably safe, or (II) to give a warning adequate to enable them to avoid the harm without relinquishing any of the services which they are entitled to receive, if the possessor is a public utility."
This is the duty of an owner or occupant of premises to its business invitees. The cases are collected in the following annotations: 118 A.L.R. 425; 100 A.L.R. 710; 58 A.L.R. 136; 46 A.L.R. 1111; 43 A.L.R. 866; 33 A.L.R. 181. Four of our later cases denying and sustaining liability under the rule are Ilgenfritz v. Missouri P. L. Co.,
[3] There is nothing inconsistent in our views in this respect and the rule requiring us to review a personal injury action on the same theory upon which it was tried in the court below. The respondent pleads an instance of two distinct torts causing her injury — concurrent negligence — and not an instance of single negligence dependent on respondeat superior, as is true in the automobile cases. Consequently, there is no change in the theory of the law of the case because the pleadings, the instructions and the evidence show each defendant to have been under a different and separate legal duty or obligation to the plaintiff and the liability or non-liability of each of them to her dependent on a different legal theory; Kroger because it is the owner and possessor and did or did not (as the jury might find) violate its duty as a storekeeper and Boemler because he was or was not guilty (as the jury might find) of certain acts of specific negligence with respect to the plaintiff. [See and compare: State ex rel. Bush v. Sturgis et al.,
[4] The appellant's assignments of error with respect to the medical testimony, the [819] instruction on the measure of damages and the excessiveness of the verdict may all be considered together. The appellant says the trial court permitted the plaintiff's medical witnesses to give argumentative, speculative and contradictory evidence, that there was no allegation that "plaintiff's left kidney was displaced or otherwise injured" and no testimony that the displacement of her kidney was a necessary result of her fall. It contends the instruction on the measure of damages is erroneous because it *635 allows the jury to find and give damages for permanent injuries when there was no proof of any such injuries resulting from the accident complained of.
Quotations from portions of the petition and summarizing some of the medical evidence sufficiently answers a part of the appellant's argument. The petition says: ". . . as a direct result of the negligence . . . of all defendants concurring as aforesaid, plaintiff's back and spine and sacroiliac joints, and the bones" etc. "were severely broken," etc., "that plaintiff's abdomen and all the organs therein were severely mashed, crushed and bruised; that she suffered a severe prolapse of all her female organs and was required to undergo an operation therefor in December, 1937, in St. Louis, Missouri; that her kidney was severely bruised, contused and crushed, so that it became necessary to perform an operation upon the plaintiff for the complete removal of her right kidney in 1937 . . . that plaintiff suffered a miscarriage . . . at her home; that she suffered a severe nervous shock . . . and all of her injuries are serious and permanent." The plaintiff and her husband testified she suffered a miscarriage and at least one doctor gave it as his opinion that she had aborted. Dr. Ozias said the kidneys were in the abdominal cavity though not inside the peritoneum and that the fall she had was sufficient to damage the kidney. Both he and Dr. Berard were of the opinion the kidney could have been misplaced by the fall. He also gave it as his opinion that her prolapsed womb was caused by the fall. Dr. Berard found both kidneys infected, the ureter kinked and removed the right kidney. Dr. Gerwitz who performed a hysterectomy said: "Well, I think the fall caused the prolapse." The appellant offered no medical testimony.
There is no question but that an allegation or plea of general damages covers only such injuries as necessarily result from the wrong relied on (Parkell v. Fitzporter et al.,
The appellant reviews the medical evidence in great detail and points out every inconsistent statement and fact (and, there are several) and asks us to apply Ducoulombier v. Thompson,
The respondent's theory in the trial of the cause and now is that the fall caused the miscarriage and prolapsing of the womb, the dropping of the kidney or kidneys, the kink in the ureter and following that the infection of the kidney and the subsequent operations removing the kidney and the womb, all of which follow one thing after *637
the other in a complete chain of causation and effect. We do not and cannot weigh the evidence as to this at least under this record. This is not a case in which we can say there was no probative evidence that respondent's condition, operations and injuries were due to the fall as was the case in Berry v. Kansas City Pub. Serv. Co.,
[5] Finally, the appellant urges that it is entitled to a new trial of this cause because of the improper closing argument of plaintiff's counsel. The statements objected to are as follows:
"You know of the great war on syphilis in this nation. Dr. Parran of the Medical Board in Washington is the one who is responsible for having a routine examination for syphilis in every hospital.
"Gentlemen, I ask you gentlemen to bring this woman in a verdict, not only because she is entitled to damages for her injury, but to vindicate her against the vicious slanders that have been cast upon her character."
In order to properly appreciate this argument it is necessary to set forth excerpts from the appellant's argument, which follow:
"He knows she didn't have any miscarriage. He knows that is all bushwa.
. . .
". . . I want to say that every statement in this court room that has been made to you for two days has been made to pull the wool over your eyes, a framed lawsuit from one end to the other.
"Mr. HULLVERSON: I object to that and I move that counsel be reprimanded.
"The COURT: Stay within the evidence.
"MR. HULLVERSON: I move that counsel be reprimanded.
"The COURT: Proceed.
"Mr. ELY: And if it isn't a framed lawsuit I never saw one.
"Mr. HULLVERSON: I move the jury be instructed to disregard it.
"The COURT: Refrain from those comments. Stay within the evidence. *638
"Mr. ELY: I say the evidence shows it is a framed lawsuit.
"Mr. HULLVERSON: I again, if the court please, ask that the court reprimand counsel for making such an unwarranted statement in this case.
"The COURT: Stay within the record, please, Mr. Ely. Refrain from making that same statement.
"Mr. ELY: All right. Note my exception.
"Oh, yes it is a tough lawsuit. You bet it is a tough lawsuit, because we have to combat one lie after another. We have to defend against things we can have no positive knowledge about. All we can have are the facts that we can present to you from her own private papers. The contradictions and lies that she has told you in this court room, or when she told the doctor in the hospital, now, which place is she the most correct in?
Standing alone Mr. Hullverson's argument may be improper but obviously what he said with reference to syphilis and bringing in a *639 verdict vindicating his client of the vicious slander was in answer to and in retaliation of Mr. Ely's argument. If we are correct in our view as to the liability of the respective defendants it was probably not improper for him to ask a verdict against only one of them. But, regardless of that we could not say his argument in this case improper or erroneous in view of his adversary's argument. We do not say it was improper for Mr. Ely to make the statements he did make nor even that his argument was not a possible inference to draw from the case, at least from his vantage point. It was strong language, a forcible argument; provocative of retaliatory argument to the contrary, to say the least, and not likely to compel the sympathetic consideration of a jury not persuaded of its cogency.
It is our opinion that the appellant has failed to demonstrate prejudicial error and the judgment is affirmed. Westhues, C., concurs; Bohling C., dissents.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.