16 S.D. 231 | S.D. | 1902
It appears from the abstract that this action was commenced in justice’s court, where the plaintiff re
If either ground of defendant Campbell’s motion to dismiss or direct a verdict was well taken, the judgment should be sustained, notwithstanding the lower court may have assigned a different reason for its ruling. In a case strikingly analogous to the one at bar the subject of master’s responsibility for the negligence of his servant is exhaustively discussed by the supreme court of Connecticut, and the general rule applicable to this class of cases is thus accurately and comprehensively stated: “For all acts done by a servant in obedience to the express orders or directions of the master, or in the execution of the master’s business, within the scope of his employment, and for acts in any sense warranted by the express or implied authority conferred upon him, considering the nature of the services required, the instructions given, and the circumstances under which the act is done, the master is responsible. For acts which are not within these conditions the servant alone is responsible.” Applying the rule to a case where a servant engaged in hauling manure from a brewery in Bridgeport to his employer’s farm, who, going out of his usual course, without his employer’s direction or knowledge, left the latter’s team standing in the street while he entered a shoemaker’s shop to inquire about having his own shoes repaired, and the team started at a slow gait up the street, when the wheels of the wagon to which they were attached collided with the plain
The next inquiry is whether the plaintiff is shown to have had such an interest in the tree as entitles him to damages for its injury., It was admitted on the trial that the street upon which it was growing and upon which the plaintiff’s land abut* ted was duly and regularly platted and dedicated to the public, and that the certificate of dedication ,was duly and regularly acknowledged and recorded prior to the commencement of this action. The owner of land in fee has the right to the surface, and. to everything permanently situated beneath or above it. Comp. Laws,. § 2781.' ‘ ‘The owner of a lot abutting upon’ a .street in a city is presumed to be the owner of the soil and freehold of the street in front of such lot to the center thereof, incumbered only by the easement' in the public fbr passing and repassing over the same, and the rights of the municipality to use the same, or permit its use, for municipal' purposes, as authorized'by law.” Edmison v. Lowry, 3 S. D. 77, 52 N. W. 583, 17 L. R. A. 275, 44 Am. St. Rep. 774; Comp. Laws, § 2783. In this state, cities have power to plant trees oh the street's. Laws 1890, c. 37, art. :5, § 8. We have a statute relating to the .laying out of towns, or an addition,- or subdivision of outlots, which contains the following provisions: “When the plat -or map shall have been made out and certified, acknowledged' and