101 Minn. 43 | Minn. | 1907
On November 15, 1905, the appellant was the proprietor of a liquor store at Brainerd, Minnesota, which was then in charge of and under the control of a bartender named Leon J. Rafidal, who was authorized to perform the ordinary duties pertaining to such a position. On the date named the respondent’s intestate, Truman D. Merrill, entered the saloon and obtained a drink for which he did not pay. Merrill at the time was to some extent under the influence of liquor, and soon became involved in a wordy controversy with other persons who were present. This continued for from one-half to three-quarters of an hour, during which time the foul and profane language which ordinarily accompanies such conditions was freely used. One of the strangers finally asked Merrill to stop quarreling and buy the drinks for the crowd. This Merrill attempted to do, but Rafidal refused to serve the drinks, because Merrill had not paid for what he had already bought. The latter then began to abuse the barkeeper and was ordered to leave the saloon. This he refused to do, and finally Rafidal knocked Merrill to the floor, after which he came from behind the bar and dragged or carried him out of the saloon and left him on the sidewalk. About two hours later Merrill was found sitting on a walk near by and taken to the city lockup, where he soon after died. A post mortem disclosed that his death was due to the fracture of blood vessels in the brain, occasioned .by a fracture at the base of the skull and of the nasal bones where they join the skull. This action was brought by the administratrix of Merrill’s estate to recover damages
The assault is admitted, and the evidence is ample to sustain a finding that the death of Merrill was the proximate result of the assault. The appellant claims that the assault was committed in a purely personal quarrel, and not in furtherance of the employer’s interests. If this is correct, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. Morier v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co., 31 Minn. 351, 17 N. W. 952, 47 Am. 793; Cofield v. McCabe, 58 Minn. 218, 59 N. W. 1005; Johanson v. Pioneer Fuel Co., 72 Minn. 405, 75 N. W. 719; Slater v. Advance Thresher Co., 97 Minn. 305, 107 N. W. 133. We are satisfied, however, that there is ample evidence to show that the assault was committed by Rafidal while acting within the scope of his employment and in an attempt to perform the duty which that employment imposed upon him to preserve order in the saloon. The complaint alleges that Rafidal, the agent of the defendant,
In charge of said saloon and vested with the power of authority and the maintenance of peace and order in said premises, did, while in the line of his employment and within the scope of his authority, and in the discharge of his duties and the furtherance of his master’s business, wilfully, violently, unlawfully, and negligently make an assault on the said Truman D. Merrill, etc.
The court charged the jury in substance that the plaintiff could recover if this was proven, but that if the assault was made “not while in the employment of his master, and not while he was engaged in looking after the interests of his master,” there could be no recovery.
It was the duty of Rafidal to collect the money due for the liquor he sold to Merrill. It was also his duty to maintain peace and quiet in the saloon, and, if necessary in order to accomplish this, he had the right to eject Merrill from the saloon, using such force only as was reasonably necessary for that purpose. Merrill was noisy and offensive, . and refused to leave the saloon. Rafidal might have taken
Q. Did you tell him to get out? A. I did. Q. How many times? * ' * * A. Two or three; twice or three times, and he wouldn’t go. Q. Why did you tell him to go out? A. Because he was troublesome in there, quarrelsome. Q. Is that the reason? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you tell him to get out because you wanted him to go out? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. You couldn’t reach an officer; if you wanted him out of there the only way you could get him out was to put him out. Is that true ? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you wanted him out? A. I wanted him out. * * * Q. You thought that you dare not take hold of him to put him out in his active condition? A. Yes, sir. Q. You thought of that, did you? A. I did. Q. At the time you struck him? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. You say that you did have it in mind that you couldn’t put him out with safety to yourself until he was disabled. When did you have that in your mind? A. I had it in my mind all the time until after he fell down.
Of course, there is evidence which would tend to show that the blow was struck to revenge a personal insult; but the evidence quoted above amply justified the jury in coming to the conclusion that the assault was merely an incident in the process of ejecting a noisy and offensive patron, whose absence was necessary to the peace and quiet of the
Error was assigned upon the refusal of the court to strike out an answer to a question asked by the court. The trial judge asked the witness Skinner the following question:
Was there anything else said or done that under ordinary circumstances would have provoked a man to commit an assault, except the calling of the names which you have referred to? A. The calling, the getting of the drinks first and not paying for them, coming back and wanting more, and calling names and shaking his fist across the bar at him, and so forth, was the cause of the striking; was all that I could see — all that I did see.
No objection was interposed to the question at the time, but after several other questions had been asked and answered the defendant’s counsel moved that the answer to this question be stricken out, and the court said: “It is too late now.” It is more than probable that the court would have withdrawn the question, had an objection been interposed. The question called for the opinion of the witness; but the answer contained an enumeration of what had been’ said and done. The vice was in the form of the question, and not in the answer. The witness stated all that he had seen, and his conclusion therefrom could not have been particularly prejudicial. Counsel are not excused from objecting to a question merely because it is asked by the presiding judge. The court might properly have granted the motion to strike out the answer to the question, but no objection had been made to the question, and it was not reversible error to refuse to grant the motion. We cannot see that the answer was prejudicial, especially as it had no bearing upon the vital question as to whether the assault was committed for the purpose of rendering it easier to eject Merrill from the room. -
The other assignments of error have been considered, and we find no errors of sufficient importance to justify a reversal of the order.
Order affirmed.