Keith v. Lynch

| Ill. App. Ct. | Jun 9, 1886

McAllister, J.

If this case had been determined by the jury upon the actual truth of the relation of defendant below to the persons and things connected with and contributing to tlxe injury complained of, it is clear that defendant could not be held liable; for there is a total absence of evidence tending to show any participation by him in the particular acts which occasioned the injury, either by being present and aiding, or by any order or direction on his part; and the evidence was explicit and uncontradicted that he had no interest in the vessel, and acted only as agent for the owner in employing the captain and hands. The law, as laid down in Stone v. Cartwright, 6 Term R. 411, is directly applicable. Nicholson v. Mounsey, 15 East, 384; Story on Ag., § 313.

The case was decided against the defendant, as we are bound to presume, on account of the first instruction which the court gave on behalf of the plaintiff, which had the effect of barring or shutting out the actual truth of the case, by what is called an estoppel. In Andrews v. Lyons, 11 Allen, 349, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts made this statement of the law in regard to such estoppels: “ The modern doctrine on this subject of estoppels in pais is thus stated by Lord Campbell, in Howard v. Hudson, 2 El. & Bl. 10: ‘If a party willfully makes a representation to another, meaning it to be acted upon, and it is so acted upon, that gives rise to what is called an estoppel. It is not quite properly so called, but it operates as a bar to receiving evidence contrary to that representation, as between those parties. Like the ancient estoppel, this conclusion shuts out the truth, and is odious, and must be strictly made out. The party setting up such a bar to the reception of the truth must show that there was a willful intent to make him act on the faith" of the representation, and that he did so act.’ ”

In the present case the plaintiff introduced the testimony of his attorney, to the effect that before bringing the suit he inquired of defendant if he was the owner of the schooner “Homer” and that defendant replied that he was. The defendant, in his testimony, explicitly denied that any such inquiry was made to or answer given by him, and those two were the only witnesses on the subject. In looking at the evidence of the conversations between the attorney and defendant, as given by the former, it is manifest that the defendant had in mind, in what he said, a suit in admiralty against the vessel as for a marine tort, and he was not informed of any desire or intention to bring an action against, the person of the owner. We are unable to find any evidence tending to show that neither the plaintiff nor his attorney had any knowledge as to the actual ownership of the vessel, except what defendant had said to the attorney, or that they relied on what he said and thus changed their position. The elements indispensable to the application of the doctrine of estoppel in pads were not only not clearly, but were not fairly made out. But, at all events, the case stood in such way, upon the evidence, that accuracy and freedom from any substantially misleading tendency in the instruction for plaintiff upon the matter of estoppel, were imperatively demanded, in order to avoid giving the plaintiff an undue advantage in his resort to a doctrine, which, when applied to a case like this, is odious and not favored, but which in this case was not fairly made out by the evidence. By the first’instruction for plaintiff the jury were told: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant, in answer to an inquiry by the plaintiff's attorney as to who was the owner of the vessel on which the accident in question occurred, and knowing or having reason to believe that such inquiry was made for the purpose of finding out who was liable for the injury, represented that he was owner of the vessel, intending the plaintiff to believe that such was the fact'' etc.

That instruction, as to several of the vital facts, speaks the language of assertion or assumption, instead of that of hypothesis or supposition. It assumes that some inquiry was made by plaintiff’s attorney, of the defendant, as to the ownership of the vessel — a fact explicitly denied by the defendant. It assumes that the defendant intended to have the plaintiff believe that he, the defendant, was the owner of the vessel. Whether or not there was any intent of that kind on the part of defendant was one of the facts to be found by the jury.

By the second instruction for plaintiff, the defendant was held responsible for misfeasance or nonfeasance on the part of the captain of the vessel in respect to the handling of the piece of timber to be used in making the repairs, without any evidence tending to show that the captain was authorized by the owner or the defendant to superintend in making such repairs, or that he was acting within the scope of his employment; and, without any hypothesis in the instruction, as to his being so authorized, or acting within the scope of his employment. If the captain was not acting under the command or direction of the owner as to the particular acts which occasioned the injury, then it is eleme* -y law that the principal was not liable for his acts of commission or omission, unless they were done in the course of his employment. “ The mere fact that a tortious act is committed by a servant while he is actually engaged in the performance of the service he has. been employed to render, can not make the master liable. Something more is required. It must not only be done while so employed, but it must pertain to the particular duties of that employment.3’ Snyder v. Railroad Co., 60 Mo. 413" date_filed="1875-05-15" court="Mo." case_name="Snyder v. Han. & St. Jos. R. R.">60 Mo. 413; C., B. & Q. R. R. Co. v. Casey, 9 Bradwell, 638.

The vessel was in her home port. The defendants had em ployed Miller Bros., a dry-dock firm, to make the repairs, and they were making them at the time of the accident. The court could not properly assume that the captain, merely because he was captain, had authority to interfere with or control the manner of doing the work, or that the doing these repairs pertained to his duties. For the errors in the instructions mentioned, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.

Judgment reversed.