182 Mo. App. 304 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is an action for damages by the widow of Isadore Classman, deceased, for the negligent killing of her husband. Somewhere near 11 o’clock at night on October 14, 1910', he was struck and killed by defendant’s automobile while the same was being driven by defendant’s chauffeur along Mc-Cee street between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets.
The only issue in the case is whether the chauffeur was in the line of his employment or acting within the scope of his service to defendant at the time of the injury. Defendant demurred to the evidence, but this was overruled and the case submitted to the jury and a verdict of $3250' obtained, upon which judgment was rendered. Prom this defendant has appealed.
Plaintiff proved that she was Isadore Classman’s widow; that he was killed by being run over by an automobile; that the automobile was owned by defendant and that the chauffeur driving the automobile was in defendant’s employ. There was no showing further than this; no facts presented from which it appeared or could be inferred that in making this particular trip the chauffeur was doing it in the service of defendant or for his or his family’s benefit. Neither defendant nor any member of his family was in the automobile at the time. Only the chauffeur and a friend of his, another chauffeur, were in the car. So that nothing was shown affecting defendant’s liability for what happened save that the car belonged to defendant and that the chauffeur was a man in defendant’s employ.
Such a showing raises a presumption of fact that the chauffeur was acting in the line of his employment. [Long v. Nute, 123 Mo. App. 204, l. c. 209; Shamp v. Lambert, 142 Mo. App. 567, l. c. 574.] And if nothing
But in this case the presumption of fact that the chauffeur was at the time within the scope of his service and employment was displaced and set aside by evidence that he was not acting in the line of his employment. It was proved that the chauffeur had positive orders not to take the car out of the garage at night unless orders were given to him to do so; that the defendant refused to allow his car to go out at night; that when it was taken out by the chauffeur on this occasion, it was without the defendant’s knowledge or consent. Moreover, the evidence showed that the automobile on the occasion in question was not taken out or used in the performance of any service or business of defendant’s but purely on a matter of the chauffeur’s own private concern. The automobile was kept at the International Garage and the chauffeur spent his time there, and whenever defendant or his wife would want the automobile they would telephone to the garage for it. On the night of the injury, between ten and eleven o’clock, a man appeared at the garage and inquired for some one to go out to the foot of Gillham hill and pull in a broken-down car. The chauffeur, thinking he would earn some money for himself, got into defendant’s ear in the garage and started out to the place in question, picking up his friend, another chauffeur, near the commencement of his trip. On his way to the broken-down car he ran over plaintiff’s husband. During this time defendant was, and had been, at home sick in bed and being ministered unto by his wife and daughter, they constituting his entire family. He knew nothing whatever of the car being out or of the accident until the next day. No evidence was offered to contradict or raise an issue of fact as to the foregoing.
But plaintiff contends that since she made out a prima-facie case, and as the jury are the judges of the facts, the court cannot say, as matter of law, that defendant’s evidence disproved plaintiff’s prima-facie case, and, the jury having found for plaintiff, we are compelled to let the verdict stand. If we were to be guided by our sympathies in the case and there were any basis upon which the verdict could be upheld we would uphold it without being compelled to do so.
The trouble with plaintiff’s contention is that there is no conflict between what plaintiff has proved and what defendant has shown. If there was, then we would defer to the finding of the jury and would have to do so. But plaintiff’s prima-facie case rested upon a presumption of fact which supplied the absence of affirmative proof on one point — whether the servant was in the line of his employment — but when affirmative evidence on that point appeared, the presumption of fact, being no more than a presumption, took flight and disappeared. And with it went plaintiff’s primafacie case. [Sowders v. Railroad, 127 Mo. App. 119, l. c. 124.] A presumption of fact will not be permitted to contradict or overcome, facts actually proved. [Whittaker v. Morrison, 44 Am. Dec. 627; Morton v. Heidorn, 135 Mo. 608, l. c. 617.] Presumptions disappear in the sunshine of facts. [Mockowik v. Railroad,
Of course, if there were inherent difficulties or improbabilities in the evidence offered on the point involved, or if reasonable men could draw different conclusions from that testimony, then the conclusion reached by the jury should prevail. But there is nothing of that kind in this case.
The judgment is reversed.