18 P.2d 207 | Or. | 1932
Action by Matt Erickson against Meier Frank Company to recover damages for personal injuries sustained when the rim and tire came off the front left wheel of one of defendant's auto trucks upon which plaintiff was riding, being employed by defendant to assist in delivering merchandise. From a judgment of involuntary nonsuit, plaintiff appeals.
REVERSED AND REMANDED. REHEARING DENIED. Defendant is a corporation engaged in the operation of a department store in Portland. On the morning of December 18, 1929, plaintiff was riding upon an auto truck belonging to defendant. Plaintiff was then an employee of defendant and his duties were to assist in making delivery of furniture and other merchandise. A Mr. Leonhardt, now deceased, was the driver of the truck. Plaintiff and Leonhardt had left defendant's warehouse at about 8:45 on the morning in question to make deliveries in the vicinity of Garden Home, and, at about 10:45 in the forenoon, they were returning to the city with other deliveries to be made.
Taking plaintiff's testimony at par, as we must, in determining the propriety of the court's ruling upon defendant's motion for nonsuit, the record discloses that, at the time of the accident, plaintiff was sitting beside the driver looking at an order book to determine where the next delivery was to be made. The truck was being driven along the Garden Home road toward Portland at from fifteen to twenty miles per hour. The road was macadam, 16 feet wide, on a slightly descending grade. It was smooth, with no rocks, bumps or ruts. Within three or four feet of the westerly side of the road, there was a very steep bank extending down from the surface of the highway a distance of from twenty to twenty-five feet. Suddenly, the left front portion of the truck dropped down on the highway, the rim and tire of the left front wheel having come off. The truck then veered to the left across the highway and over the bank, and plaintiff received personal injuries.
Shortly after the accident, the head mechanic of respondent arrived from Portland, and, while looking *78 over the ground at the place of the accident, found a lug and a nut which afterwards he gave to plaintiff. Immediately after the accident, the smaller rim of the wheel was found at a point about twenty-five or thirty feet from the place where the truck went over the bank; and several other lugs and nuts were found at the place of the accident.
Plaintiff claims that the truck was defective and in an unsafe condition for use, and that defendant failed to exercise reasonable care in respect to furnishing a safe truck with which to carry on its work.
The record also discloses that defendant maintained a garage and repair shop where defendant repaired its trucks. In that department, there were two day mechanics and six night men.
The question involved is whether the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur may be involked in this case. We are not unmindful that many cases may be found holding that this maxim never applies in a master and servant case. On the other hand, there are many master and servant cases wherein it has been applied. 4 Labatt's Master Servant, pp. 4864, et seq., section 1601 and cases there cited; 6 L.R.A. (N.S.) 337; 16 L.R.A. (N.S.) 214. The latter class of cases, in our opinion, is supported by the better reasoning. As stated by Mr. Labatt (ibid):
"No satisfactory reason is given why the maxim should not apply in such cases, although its application is somewhat restricted because of the subsidiary rules governing such relationship".
Among the many cases cited in note 10 of section 1601, Labatt on Master Servant, supra, are six which we deem especially worthy of notice here. *79
One of these six is the case of Folk v. Schaeffer,
The court there held that the conclusion that the knot was improperly tied was an inference from the fact that it became untied. The court then said:
"Ordinarily, an accident would not have happened as this did, if care had been exercised in tying the ropes. There was no difficulty in making them secure. Under the circumstances shown by the plaintiff, the burden was thrown on the defendants to show that due care had been used, and, in the absence of any explanation, the jury might infer want of care. The defendants were not bound satisfactorily to explain the cause of the accident, but they were bound to rebut the presumption of negligence arising from the attendant circumstances". *80
Another of the six cases mentioned is Winkelmann Brown DrugCo. v. Colladay,
We quote the language of the court on this point:
"Now it is apparent that the material facts of the case are conflicting and this being so, the plaintiff had a right to have the whole case passed upon by the jury. It is well settled that unless there is some prominent and decisive act, in regard to the effect and character of which no room is left for ordinary minds to differ, Courts will not withdraw the case from the consideration of the jury. Central Ry. Co. v. Coleman,
Another of these cases is Sullivan v. Rowe,
The evidence was conflicting as to whether or not at the time of the accident there was a rope attached to the bolt on which the buffer iron was hung which would prevent it from falling in case the split keys came out, and the split key, the coming out of which released the buffer, permitting it to fall, was not produced at the trial; a witness testifying that it was so small that it could not be found in the bottom of the ditch after the accident.
The court said:
"In our opinion the falling of the buffer was under the circumstances in itself evidence of negligence".
Another case is Texas P. Coal Co. v. Daves,
The court said:
"We find that the evidence tended to prove negligence as alleged, and warranted the verdict, although the witnesses offered by the appellees to make out their case, being those in charge of and assisting in the work, all claimed to have adjusted and operated the machinery in a very careful manner".
Fearington v. Blackwell Durham Tobacco Co.,
The last of the six cases mentioned is the case of Dahlen v.New York Life Ins. Co.,
"The evidence shows that the defendant, by its engineer, had possession and control of the elevators *85 in the building, and that it was his duty to see that they were kept in repair and in good running order, and that the duty of the plaintiff was simply to operate his elevator. It follows that, if the accident did occur by reason of the elevator not working properly while the plaintiff was operating it, without any fault on his part, proof of such facts would be sufficient prima facie to establish the negligence of the defendant".
The phrase, res ipsa loquitur, may be said to have a restricted and a general meaning. As applied to the facts in this case, it need not be given the restricted construction to the effect merely that the thing itself speaks. A nonsuit having been granted, only the evidence in behalf of plaintiff appears in the record. This evidence discloses that the defendant through its servants had the exclusive management and control of the vehicle which caused the injury; that plaintiff was without fault; that plaintiff's duties were such that the fellow servant rule does not apply; and that the accident occurred by reason of a defective part of the auto truck upon which plaintiff was riding.
We cannot agree with defendant's assertion that there was nothing defective about the truck. A defect implies a deficiency, a lack or want. Here it consisted of a lack of the proper adjustment and tightening of nuts and lugs, resulting in a loose rim. Aside from riding on it to make the deliveries, the only work about the truck which plaintiff was called upon to do was to fill the tank with gasoline. We think that the jury would have been justified in finding that the nuts holding the lugs which in turn kept the rim and the tire in place would not have fallen off if they had been properly tightened at defendant's shop. *86
A circumstance, having some significance, was the delivery by defendant's chief mechanic to plaintiff of the lug and nut which he found at the place of the accident. In the absence of any explanation, the jury certainly would have been justified in finding therefrom that, from a mechanic's viewpoint, these items were of evidentiary value in support of plaintiff's claim. In fact, to any one, they indicate that loosened nuts and lugs allowed the tire and rim to come off of the wheel.
Defendant cites Finn v. Oregon W.P. Ry. Co.,
In the case of Duntley v. Inman,
De Mars v. Heathman,
Phillipsen v. Hunt,
The two federal cases, cited by counsel for defendant since the oral argument herein, belong to the class of cases wherein it is held that the doctrine res ipsa loquitur is inapplicable to cases between master and servant brought to recover damages for negligence.
We think that the motion for nonsuit should have been overruled.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded.
BEAN and ROSSMAN, JJ., concur.
RAND, C.J., concurs in the result. *88