Guipe v. Jones

30 N.W.2d 408 | Mich. | 1948

Defendant Reese Jones is the owner of a bar operated under a class "C" liquor license. *3 Defendant Indemnity Insurance Company is the surety on defendant Jones' statutory bond* filed with his application for the license.

During Jones' absence and while a bartender employed by him was in charge of the place, plaintiff entered, ordered certain drinks and paid the waitress who served him. Thereafter he was served a drink which he claimed he had not ordered and for which he refused to pay the waitress. The bartender then attempted to collect from plaintiff and, upon his continued refusal to pay, struck him, causing plaintiff to lose the sight of an eye. Although the waitress testified that, in accord with the practice in the place, she had paid the bartender for the drink before she served it to plaintiff, and while defendants claim that, in consequence, the bartender was acting as the agent of the waitress in attempting to collect from plaintiff, the undisputed testimony of this same waitress is that it was the bartender's duty and responsibility and his uniform practice, as an employee of defendant, to see to it that patrons paid the waitresses for drinks served.

Upon trial the court dismissed the case against defendant Indemnity Insurance Company. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff and against defendant Jones in the amount of $7,500. Defendant Jones appeals and plaintiff cross-appeals from the order dismissing as to defendant Indemnity Insurance Company.

Defendants' brief, containing, under the heading of "argument," some 37 pages of testimony taken, page after page, from the printed record, is not too helpful to the Court. Under the heading of "questions involved" defendants list five questions, the *4 first four of which inquire whether the court erred in refusing (1) to direct a verdict for defendant Jones at the close of plaintiff's proofs, (2) to direct a verdict for defendant Jones at the close of defendants' proofs, (3) to grant defendant Jones' motion for a judgment non obstante veredicto, (4) to grant defendant Jones' motion for a new trial.

As a fifth question involved, defendants ask whether the court erred in refusing to give two of defendants' requests to charge. The first request was predicated on the assumption that the bartender struck plaintiff while acting as the agent of the waitress and outside the scope of his duties as defendant's employee. The instructions given by the court fairly and adequately covered defendants' claim in this respect, properly leaving it to the jury to determine the correctness of this claim under all the testimony on the subject. The second request was, in effect, that defendant as employer would not be liable for a blow struck by his employee, the bartender, in the course of an argument between the bartender and plaintiff. There was no testimony as to an argument between them independent of that attendant upon the bartender's attempt to collect and plaintiff's refusal to pay. Consequently, and in view of the undisputed testimony that the bartender was acting within the scope of his employment in seeking to enforce payment, defendants were not entitled to such instruction as requested.

As relates to the first four questions, the burden of defendants' argument, as set forth in their brief, seems to be that defendant Jones was entitled to a directed verdict and thereafter to a judgment non obstante veredicto or a new trial because (1) the bartender struck in self-defense, (2) the bartender's act was willful and wanton and, therefore, outside the scope of his duties and authority as defendant's employee, *5 (3) the bartender was at the time acting as an agent of the waitress rather than of the defendant. These claims of the defendants were all fairly submitted to the jury under the court's instructions. The jury evidently did not believe these claims. There is ample evidence to the contrary and the jury's verdict, so far from being contrary to, is, in fact, supported by the great weight of the evidence.

As authority for the proposition that an employer is liable for injuries resulting from an assault inflicted by an employee while acting within the scope of his employment, see: Canton v.Grinnell, 138 Mich. 590; Zart v. Singer Sewing Machine Co.,162 Mich. 387; Moffit v. White Sewing Machine Co., 214 Mich. 496.

Verdict and judgment for plaintiff against defendant Reese Jones are affirmed, with costs in both courts to plaintiff against said defendant.

The defendant Indemnity Insurance Company has executed defendant Jones' appeal bond as surety. The question of the defendant company's liability as surety on the liquor bond having become, therefore, as plaintiff concedes, moot, we decline to consider it. Both defendants having been represented by the same attorney and defendant Indemnity Insurance Company having filed no separate brief, no costs are allowed to either that defendant or the plaintiff on the cross appeal.

BUSHNELL, C.J., and SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, NORTH, BUTZEL, and CARR, JJ., concurred.

* See Act No. 8, § 22, Pub. Acts 1933 (Ex. Sess.), as amended by Act No. 281, Pub. Acts 1937 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 9209-37, Stat. Ann. 1947 Cum. Supp. § 18.993). — REPORTER. *6

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