57 So. 82 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
This is an action for the conversion of a wagon and two mules which had been mortgaged to the plaintiff (the appellee here). The transaction on .which is based the charge that the defendant (appellant) corporation converted the mortgaged property was as follows: The mortgagor, Campbell, who lived in Florida, came in the wagon, accompanied by his young son, to the town of Samson in this state, stopped in the street near the storehouse of the defendant, unhitched the mules and tied them to the hind wheel of the wagon, and went into the defendant’s store. While he was in the store .making a settlement for a bale of cotton with J. S. Pinckard, one of the defendant’s. clerks, his son, called attention to- the fact that some one had hitched the mules to the wagon and
The liability of a corporation for a tort committed by its agent is but an application of the doctrine as a part of the law of agency; and in respect of such liability private corporations stand before the law on the same footing as natural persons. A state of facts which would not render a natural person liable for an act of one who was at the time his agent would not render a corporation liable if it is the principal or employer sought to be charged.—Jordan v. Alabama Great Southern R. Co., 74 Ala. 85, 49 Am. Rep. 800; 10 Cyc. 1204. “It is a general rule of the law of agency, that a principal is liable for any tort committed by his agent in the performance of the business which he was employed to transact, even though the particular act constituting the tort may have been done without the knowledge of the principal, and in violation of his express directions; but a principal is not responsible for an act performed by his agent while in no manner engaged in performing the business of the principal.”—2 Morawetz on Private Corporations (2d Ed.) § 730. The principal is liable when the wrong was committed by the agent while acting within the general scope of his employment; and he is not liable when the agent, in committing the wrong, steps outside of the line ór scope of his' employment to accomplish some purpose of his own having no relation to the business of the corporation in which he is employed. The doctrine of respondeat superior has no application where the employe* for the time being, abandons the business he was employed to transact, and commits an independent wrong while engaged in a transaction having no connection with that- business.—Johnson v. Alabama Fuel & Iron Co., 166 Ala. 534, 52 South. 312; Goodloe v. Memphis & Charleston R. Co.,
In the case at bar there is nothing in the evidence to support an inference that the employes of the defendant were any longer engaged ih any way in transacting its business Avhen they responded to the appeal of Campbell for assistance in preventing Sykes, a stranger not knoAAm to have any kind of claim of right to accomplisn AAdiat he Avas trying, to do, from getting away with his wagon and team. They simply dropped the business of the store, and lent their aid to Campbell in protecting his property. Their purpose in this was Avholly foreign to the business of the defendant Nor was there any eAddence of a change of plan or purpose Avhen Sykes made it known that what he was doing Avas in an effort to collect a debt due to Chapman. The remark of Pinckaxd testified to by Sykes does not indicate that the former claimed the property for the defendant, or undertook to do anything for or on behalf of the defendant in reference to it. At no time did any one have or claim possession for or on behalf of the defendant. All that Avas done or attempted Avas to thwart the attempt of Sykes to get away with the wagon and team, and to restore them to Campbell, who at once resumed the possession and control which Sykes had attempted to interrupt. It is the merest unsup- ' ported conjecture to claim that at any stage of the occurrence above detailed either of the defendant’s employes who figured in it was engaged in the business of
The trial court was in error in admitting, over the objection of the defendant, evidence of a declaration or statement made by an agent of the defendant in reference to the occurrence after it had happened, and not shown to have been made in connection with any transaction or dealing at that time by or on behalf of the defendant with the property in question. It Avas beyond the scope of the agent’s authority to bind his principal by such admissions or declarations having reference to a bygone transaction. —Western Newspaper Union v. Judson, 1 Ala. App. 615, 55 South. 1026; Tennessee River Transportation Co. v. Kavanaugh Bros. 93 Ala. 324, 9 South. 395. With this evidence excluded, as it should have been, the defendant Avas entitled to the general affirmative charge requested in its behalf.
Reversed and remanded.