120 Kan. 119 | Kan. | 1926
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action grew out of a collision of two automobiles at a street intersection in Hutchinson.
On November 23, 1923, plaintiff’s wife was taking her children to school in plaintiff’s car. As she was driving westward on Seventeenth street, about 8:45 a. m.', defendants’ employee came speeding southward on Poplar street in a delivery truck and negligently drove it against plaintiff’s car, upsetting and damaging it, and causing slight injuries to plaintiff’s wife so that she required medical
Defendants answered with a general denial, and alleged that the collision and consequent damages were due to the negligence of plaintiff’s wife in driving, and that she drove without looking or trying to avoid a collision “with defendant’s servant.”
Plaintiff’s evidence tended to support the allegations of his petition. Defendants’, demurrer thereto was overruled. Defendants’ evidence tended to show that the collision occurred at about 7:45 a. m., while the driver of their truck, George Sproule, was not engaged in their service, but on an errand of his own; that he had used defendants’ truck that morning before working hours to take his father to the fair grounds, and that he was returning from that trip when the collision occurred at Seventeenth and Poplar streets, and that it was not on account of any business of defendants that Sproule was in that locality at that time in the morning.
The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $415 as prayed for, and answered special questions, some of which read:
“Q. 2. If Sproule, the driver of defendants’ car, was negligent in not avoiding a collision with plaintiff’s automobile, then state what the negligence of Sproule in this respect was, which caused the collision? A. Speeding and lack of attention.
“Q. 3. Was the collision between the car of defendants and plaintiff caused by a want of care and caution on the part of both plaintiff’s wife and Sproule, the driver of defendants’ car? A. No.
“Q. 4. Did Sproule, the driver of defendants’ car, take his father to the fair grounds the morning of the accident unknown to defendants and without their direction? A. No.
“Q. 7. Did Sproule, the driver of defendants’ car, reside with his father? A. Yes.
“Q. 8. Was it necessary for Sproule, the driver of defendants’ car, to go by the intersection of Poplar and Seventeenth streets in going' from his father’s house after breakfast to the manufacturing plant of defendants? A. No.”
Judgment was entered for plaintiff, and defendants appeal.
They first contend that the evidence was insufficient to prove that Sproule was engaged in defendants’ business at the time of the collision.
Let us see about this point: Defendants’ answer admitted that Sproule was their servant. They were engaged in the manufacture and sale of ice cream. There was evidence that Sproule went on
“Evidence that a person was actually engaged in performing labors such as were a part of the ordinary business of an employer is sufficient to go to the jury as evidence that he was acting as a servant' of the latter.”
Defendants seek to emphasize the evidence given in their behalf to the effect that the collision occurred at 7:45 a. m., before their employee went on duty and while he was returning from the fair grounds where he had gone with his father, purely on an errand of his own and not in the service of his employers. That would have been a good defense if the jury had believed it. Being disbelieved, it has no particular significance in this appeal. In Fenn v. Kansas Gas & Electrict Co., 118 Kan. 131, 234 Pac. 77, it was said:
“One trouble with . . . defendant’s argument is the assumption that what its witnesses testified to must be accepted by this court as true, which, of course, is altogether incorrect. (Citing authorities.)” (p. 136.)
“The trial court and jury constitute the fact-finding tribunal, not the supreme court.” (Fowler v. Shaw, 119 Kan. 576, 586, 240 Pac. 970.)
There was sufficient evidence to support plaintiff’s cause of action to require the overruling of defendants’ demurrer thereto.
Error is based on instruction No. 13, which reads:
“The jury are instructed that one of the defenses made by the defendants is that George Sproule, while an employee of the defendants, was not engaged in their business at the time of the accident, but that said Sproule was engaged outside of defendants’ business and acting for himself or his father, and was on his own business or the business of his father at the time of the accident.
“You are further instructed that this is a good defense, as an employer is not responsible for injuries or damages caused by an employee when not engaged in his business, so that in this case unless you find that George Sproule was actually engaged in his employers’ business at the time of the accident, your verdict will be for the defendant.”
The objection urged against this instruction was that it placed the burden on defendants of proving that at the time of the accident Sproule was not engaged in the business of defendants. We do not think the instruction is justly open to that criticism, espe
Defendants also complain of the trial court’s refusal to give certain instructions prepared by them. These emphasized the point that defendants were not liable for the tort of their employee if he were not engaged in their business at the time of the collision. But that matter was adequately covered in the "instructions which the court did give, and there was no error in refusing to incorporate in the court’s instructions the precise text of others prepared by defendants. (City of Topeka v. Tuttle, 5 Kan. 311, syl. ¶ 4; Farmers State Bank v. Brenneke, 118 Kan. 251, 253, and citations, 234 Pac. 985.)
Error is also assigned on the trial court’s refusal to set aside the jury’s finding No. 4. The question was not improperly submitted, since it had some evidential bearing on the controlling issue in- the case; and the answer was candid, direct, and responsive. We discern no error there.
Another grievance urged by defendants relates to what they choose to call misconduct of plaintiff’s attorney, who in his address to the jury quite bluntly argued that defendants’ witness Sproule had not told the truth, adding such comment and suggestions thereto as were prompted by the circumstances. But there is nothing in the excerpts from the attorney’s address produced for our inspection which trenched upon the limits of fair discussion, and the error assigned lacks merit. (2 R. C. L. 411-416; 38 Cyc. 1485 et seq.)
A final error is based on the denial of defendants’ motion for a new trial. When defendants discovered that the jury had utterly rejected the testimony of Sproule to the effect that the collision had occurred before 8 a. m., as he was returning from a trip to the fair grounds, an affidavit of Sproule’s father was produced- in support of the motion for a new trial. It corroborated part of his son’s testimony. This evidence was merely cumulative, and no excuse was offered to show why it was not forthcoming at the trial. (Pittman Co. v. Hayes, 98 Kan. 273, 277, 278, 157 Pac. 1193; Dunham v. Bokel, 105 Kan. 369, 184 Pac. 636.) One of the defendants also filed an affidavit averring that he personally knew that there were no deliveries to be made in the vicinity of the scene of the collision on the day it happened, and that he knew Sproule was
A patient consideration o.f this case in its entirety discloses nothing which would justify a disturbance of the judgment. It is therefore affirmed.