160 Iowa 119 | Iowa | 1913
The defendant is a corporation operating a retail dry goods store in Des Moines, and damages are claimed of it because of a collision of a horse and delivery wagon with plaintiff while attempting to cross a street. It appears that a boy about nineteen years old was driving a horse hitched to a delivery wagon south on Fifth street, when it stopped about halfway between Locust street and Grand avenue, or one-third the way north of Locust street, and, though urged would not start. It was allowed to stand a few minutes, when the boy got out of the wagon and went to the horse’s head.’ Thereupon it lunged forward, partly trotting and partly galloping. The boy sprang into the wagon again, but did not seize the reins, which hung from the top of the wagon, and, as the horse ran south, the wagon shaft struck plaintiff in the back when about ten feet north* of the south line of Locust street, causing her to fall, and the wagon ran over her.
That said horse was unruly, vicious, balky, and was an unfit horse to be driven upon the streets of Des Moines, and that defendant was negligent in permitting said horse to be driven on said street at said time and place; that defendant was negligent in employing and permitting a boy to drive said horse; that said boy was negligently driving said horse; that the horse balked with said boy, and the boy negligently left his seat and got from the wagon and went to the head of the horse and negligently started same and negligently made no effort to stop the same, but jumped into the wagon and negligently let said horse run across said intersection at a dangerous rate of speed, and in violation of the city ordinance; that, after said boy had negligently started said horse at a high rate of speed, he negligently, willfully, wantonly, and recklessly made no effort to gather said lines or stop said horse, but let same go at will until it struck and injured plaintiff as aforesaid.
II. The plaintiff was asked:
4. Same: evidence: hearsay. Do you know whose horse and wagon this was that ran over you? A. J. Mandelbaum & Sons. (Defendant objected to the question and moved to strike the answer out as the eonelusion of the witness.) Court: You may tell yes or no. A. Yes, sir. Mr. Allen: Whose horse and wagon was it? A. Mandelbaum & Sons. (Cross-examination): Q. Did you see that horse that struck you? A. No, sir; I didn’t. Q. You did not see him before or after he struck you? A. No, sir. Mr. Parsons: I now move to strike from the testimony of Mrs. Howell her evideneé as to whose horse it was, because it was necessarily based upon hearsay', and she did not see the horse. Court: It must have been entirely by hearsay. Mr. Allen: No, it was not. Court: Then show what it was. Mr. Allen: It would not be hearsay if it was by admission. Court: It would be hearsay unless she knew herself. Witness: If Mr. Mandelbaum told me it was, wouldn’t that be admissible from him ? (Defendant moves to strike out the testimony as to what*123 Mr. Mandelbaum said as immaterial and being a conclusion.) Mr. Allen: How do you know that was J. Mandelbaum’s horse ? A. Mr. Morris Mandelbaum told .me it was and that he was very sorry for it. (Defendant moves to strike out the testimony as incompetent and immaterial for any purpose.) Court: Who is Mr. Morris Mandelbaum? (Objected to by the defendant.) A. He is Mr. Mandelbaum’s brother, J. Mandelbaum ’s son. Mr. Allen.: Is he the one of the sons referred to? A. Yes, sir; he is one of the sons referred to in J. Mandelbaum & Sons. Q. Did you do business with them? A. I have paid them hundreds of dollars. Q. Do you know them all ? A. I am not as well acquainted with this gentleman as I am with the younger brother. Q. It was. one of the members of the firm that told you? A. Yes,' sir; one of the members of the firm that came to my home. Mr. Parsons: I move to strike out the testimony of this examination as incompetent and for the reason it is not binding on this defendant. (Overruled, and defendant excepts.)
The petition alleged, and the answer admitted, that defendant was a corporation. As such, it necessarily acts through its authorized agents or employees. For all that appears, Morris Mandelbaum may have been one of the “Sons” included in the corporate name, but have had no connection whatever with the corporation itself. Before the declarations of an agent are admissible, the party offering to prove them must, at least, give some evidence tending to show that he had the power to act for his principal in relation to the matter in hand and that the same was within the scope of his authority. Armil v. Railway, 70 Iowa, 130; Livingston v. Railway, 35 Iowa, 555; Verry v. Railway, 47 Iowa, 549; Wood Mowing & Reaping Machine Co. v. Crow, 70 Iowa, 340; Phelps v. James, 86 Iowa, 398. For the reason that there was no evidence that Morris Mandelbaum was an agent or officer of defendant, or, if such, was acting within the scope of his employment, the motion to strike out the testimony of what he had said should have been sustained.
In Ryan v. Railway, 60 Ill. App. 612, the only evidence of the ownership of an engine was that it bore the letters “B. & 0.,” and this was held enough to sustain a finding that it belonged to the Baltimore & Ohio Railway Company; the court saying: “Initials of railroad companies get to be as well known to the general public as the abbreviations which indicate the location of land under congressional survey. Jackson v. Cummings, 15 Ill. 449. From Lake Michigan to the Atlantic ‘B. & 0.’ on an engine mean Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, without regard to the track it is upon or
In Schulte v. Holliday, 54 Mich. 73 (19 N. W. 752), evidence that the name of the defendant firm was upon the wagon at the time of the injury was held to be admissible “to identify the horse and vehicle used by defendant at the time.” In Edgeworth v. Wood, 58 N. J. Law, 463 (33 Atl. 940), the complainant was run over by a wagon, and it was contended, as disclosed in the opinion that there was not:
Sufficient evidence that the driver of the horses which collided with plaintiff was the servant or agent of the express company, for whose negligence the company would be liable. Upon this subject the evidence shows that the United States Express Company was engaged in the business of transporting express matter over railroads running out of Hoboken, and also railroads running out of Communitaw. It maintained a stable in the vicinity of the place at which plaintiff was injured, in which were stabled the horses which drew over one hundred wagons belonging to the company. These wagons were painted in peculiar colors, and had upon their sides the name of the company and a device, which one of the witnesses called its ‘trade-mark.’ All the witnesses who saw the accident and noticed the wagon which ran over plaintiff unite in declaring that it was painted as were the wagons of the company, and that it was marked with the company’s name and*126 device. Considering the great improbability that any other owner of a wagon would thus paint and mark it, a plain inference could be drawn from the evidence that the wagon in question was in the ownership of the company. If that inference be drawn, it is sufficient to establish prima facie that the wagon, being owned by the company, was in its possession, and that whoever was driving it was doing so' for the company. In an action for an injury to a boat of plaintiff by a collision with a barge, there was evidence that the barge was marked by the defendant’s name and number, and it was contended that this was not sufficient to show that it was navigated by defendant’s servant, as it might have been taken by some one else or have been on hire. But Lord Denman, at nisi prius, held that the fact that the barge was owned by defendant was prima facie evidence that the bargeman was his servant, and cast on defendant the burden of proving it was otherwise controlled. Joyce v. Capel, 8 Car. & P. 370. Proof of the ownership of a pair of runaway horses in defendant was held in New York to be sufficient to justify a jury in finding the persons who were in charge of the horses when negligently permitted to escape were defendant’s servants. Norris v. Kohler, 41 N. Y. 42. A like view was taken in Svenson v. Steamship Co., 57 N. Y. 108.
In Norris v. Kohler, 41 N. Y. 42, the decedent was run over by a team of which defendant was owner, and it was contended that from this a presumption arose that “it was in use for his benefit and on his account,” and on this subject the court said: ‘ ‘ This argument, I think, is a sound one. The ownership of personal property draws to it the possession. The owner is entitled to have and to keep' possession, and no other person can justly obtain possession until some act of authority from- the owner is proved. Ownership . implies possession, and possession is in subordination to title. No proof was given in the present ease, separating the ownership from the possession, and the presumption of law is that the wagon and horses of the defendant were in use in his service, and on his account.”
Whether a different rule would obtain iñ case of an auto
Certain it is that from proof that the driver is in possession in the absence of anything more, it will be presumed that he is there with the assent of the owner and not wrongfully, as intimated in the last-cited case. And we are of opinion that, in such a situation, it is inferable that therein he is acting for the owner rather than for himself as borrower or hirer. Such would be the conclusion ordinarily drawn, and, though not of much weight, we are of opinion that it was enough to carry the issue to the jury.
For the reasons stated, there was no error in overruling defendant’s motion for a verdict.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is Reversed.