34 Mo. App. 512 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
This action is for personal injuries to plaintiff charged to have resulted from the negligence of defendants’ servants.
Defendants operate and conduct a brewery in Kansas City and had in their employ a servant, as a driver of one of their beer wagons. On Sunday, the day of the accident, without defendants’ knowledge, he took an acquaintance upon the w-agon with him at the request of the acquaintance, who merely wanted a ride.
This acquaintance was also an employe of defendants but in an altogether different department.. The ■wagon was loaded with empty beer barrels which began to fall off into the street, when the wagon was stopped close up to the side-walk, in front of the house where
To say authority exists in a teamster to hire other servants for his master would be an unreasonable and extreme statement; it would imply, also the right, too, to fix compensation and discharge servants, in other words, would make of him a vice-principal. Whether a servant, however inferior, would have authority in a sudden emergency to hire assistance in order to save the property of which he is in charge, or prevent its doing some impending harm, is not necessary here to consider, as such question does not arise in this case.
In Randleson v. Murray, 8 Ad. & El. 109, a warehouseman employed a master porter to remove a barrel of flour from his warehouse. The porter used his own tackle and employed men in the removal. It was held
The principal authority relied upon by the plaintiff in this case, is that of Althorf v. Wolfe, 22 N. Y. 355, where the master directed his servant to remove snow and ice from the roof of his residence. The servant without the actual knowledge of the master asked a friend to go with him to the roof, the friend did so and volunteered to assist in throwing off the snow and ice into the street below. The master was held liable for an injury resulting in the death of a passenger in the street, though the ice inflicting the injury may have been thrown by the volunteer and not the servant. ■ The ground upon which this decision was put by the two judges delivering opinions therein makes it wholly inapplicable to this case. It is put by Wrigtit, J., upon the ground that the work was done on defendant’s fixed property, i. e., his house, into which the servant’s friend was admitted with the knowledge and consent of the master’s wife and family.
The upshot of the opinion by Wright, J., is, that the volunteer was admitted into defendant’s house and onto the roof to assist the servant, with the knowledge and assent of those in charge of the premises for defendant and that it was therefore defendant’s knowledge and assent.
Denio, J., rests the case on the ground that the defendant had the control of his house and premises and
The result of that case is, that while the facts are in many respects applicable to the case at bar, the ground, upon which the decision has been put, does not aid us in the solution of the present question. The same result might, perhaps, have been reached in that case for a different reason. The act of the volunteer was substantially the act of the servant, for he was immediately present, standing by and directed that the ice be thrown into the street; it was as much his act as if done by his own hand. If a servant in charge of his master’s carriage should take a stranger with him into the driver’s seat, hand him the reins and tell him to drive at a run and an injury happen in consequence of the speed, the master must answer for the damage, for the negligence was that of his servant.
But not so if the servant had quit the carriage and substituted the stranger in charge, generally, in his stead, without the knowledge of the master.
For if an injury happen it is not the act of the servant for whom only is the master liable. In Booth v. Mister, 7 Carr & P. 66, a servant in charge of his master’s cart gave over the reins to one in the cart with him, an injury happening in consequence of the negligent driving, the master was made to respond.
Lord Abinger said, “As the defendant’s servant was in the cart, I think that the reins being held by another man makes no difference. It was the same as if the servant had held them himself.”
An injury happening from a fire that was negligently set by the servant’s son, but who, himself, had no relation with the master, the master was held liable on the ground that the servant was present and expressly directed the son to set the fire. It was precisely as much the act of the father as though he had used some other means or instrument in conveying the fire and kindling the flame.”
In the case of Bush v. Steinman, 4 Bos. & Pul. 404, decided in 1799, the principal case asserting the “fixed property” rule, which has since been overruled in England and quite generally repudiated in this country, there occurs, incidentally, a statement that, “a master having employed his servant to do some act, the servant out of idleness employed another to do it, and that person in carrying into execution the orders which had been given to the servant committed an injury to the plaintiff, for which the master was held liable.” Assuming the employment was made by the servant without the master’s knowledge, that statement is much too broad, for if the party employed goes independently and separately about the service to be performed, he is but the servant of the servant and not of the master. It is but a step from that statement to say that a servant may become the master’s alter ego, regardless of the object or the nature of his service.
Our conclusion is that Ehrhard was not the servant of the defendants and if they are to be held liable in this case it must be through the act of the driver.
If, therefore, the driver himself negligently threw the barrel the case is settled at once against defendants; but if Ehrhard threw it, it must appear that he was directed or requested to do so by the driver. Such direction or request need not, necessarily, be by express
The foregoing answers the points and suggestions offered in the briefs and arguments in the cause and the only question remaining is, whether the instructions submitted the case to the jury in consonance with the view we have taken. Plaintiff’s instruction merely submitted the question of whether the act was done by the servant of defendants. But the defendants asked and had given an instruction declaring that if “(the driver) Yogel did not directly or indirectly throw, or order to be thrown, the beer keg that injured plaintiff, but said John G. Ehrhard did, of his own will and accord, without employment or direction from any one, throw said keg against plaintiff, and thereby cause the injury complained of, then plaintiff cannot recover in this suit, and your verdict must be for defendants.”
The instructions, when taken together, show that the question was submitted to the jury whether the driver himself threw the kegs, or whether they were thrown by Ehrhard by the direction, or with the assent, of the driver.
This under the evidence in the cause which clearly tends to show the driver to have been present and that Ehrhard threw off the kegs for him, under his immediate supervision and in accordance with his wish and desire, wras sufficient.
We do not deem the objection to the petition to be well founded. Strong objection is made to the reasons given by the trial court for overruling the motion for new trial, but' as the motion was properly overruled, we will not, in a case of this kind, examine into the reasons which may have brought, the court to a correct conclusion.
the judgment is affirmed.