ALICE TURNER MULLALLY v. LANGENBERG BROTHERS GRAIN COMPANY, a Corporation, Appellant
Division One
November 12, 1936
98 S. W. (2d) 645
Opinion filed at September Term, 1935, April 23, 1936; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at September Term, 1936, November 12, 1936.
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by BRADLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
Hollingsworth & Francis, Joseph N. Hassett and Ernest E. Baker for appellant.
Appellant‘s first contention is, that as the wife could not maintain an action against the husband for damages on account of injuries caused by his negligence the same immunity applies to the husband‘s employer where the action against the employer, as in this case, is based solely upon the doctrine of respondeat superior. Respondent concedes: “That, under the law of this State, as it exists at the present time, a wife cannot maintain a civil action against her husband for damages for personal injuries sustained by reason of his negligence,” but says that does not preclude a recovery by the wife against the employer under the respondeat superior rule if the negligent act causing the injuries occurred while the husband was in the performance of the duties of his employment and acting in the course and within the scope of that employment. The rule in this State is, as stated, that “a wife cannot maintain a civil action against her husband for a personal tort.” The reason and basis of the rule is fully stated in Willott v. Willott, 333 Mo. 896, 62 S. W. (2d) 1084, and Rogers v. Rogers, 265 Mo. 200, 177 S. W. 382. In the Willott case we held that a wife could not maintain a civil action against her husband for injuries sustained from the husband‘s negligent operation of an automobile. But we find no Missouri decision, and none is cited by
“The disability of wife or husband to maintain an action against the other for injuries to the person is not a disability to maintain a like action against the other‘s principal or master. There are, indeed, decisions to the contrary by courts of other states. (Citing cases.) We are unable to accept them. True, of course, it is that a master is not liable for the act of his servant, under the rule of respondeat superior, if the act itself was lawful. . . . A judgment to that effect in an action against the servant may be pleaded as a bar in an action against the master. . . .
“An employer commits a trespass by the hand of his servant upon the person of another. The act, let it be assumed, is within the scope either of an express mandate or of an implied one. In either event, if the trespass is not justified, he is brought under a distinct and independent liability, a liability all his own. The statement sometimes made that it is derivative and secondary . . . means this, and nothing more: That at times the fault of the actor will fix the quality of the act. Illegality established, liability ensues. The defendant, to make out a defense, is thus driven to maintain that the act, however negligent, was none the less lawful because committed by a husband upon the person of his wife. This is to pervert the meaning and effect of the disability that has its origin in marital identity.
“A trespass, negligent or willful, upon the person of a wife, does not cease to be an unlawful act, though the law exempts the husband from liability for the damage. Others may not hide behind the skirts of his immunity. . . .
“We are told that in the long run the consequences of upholding an action against the master may be to cast the burden on the husband, since the master, if not personally at fault, has a remedy over. (Citing cases.) The consequence may be admitted, without admitting its significance as a determining factor in the solution of the problem. The master who recovers over against the servant does not need to build his right upon any theory of subrogation to a cause of action
once belonging to the victim of the injury. A sufficient basis for his recovery is the breach of an independent duty owing to himself. The servant owes the duty to the master to render faithful service, and must answer for the damage if the quality of the service is lower than the standard.”
The opinion in the same case in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York also well and clearly reasons the question as follows:
“The United States courts and a majority of the State courts have decided that the various statutes relieving married women from the restrictions placed upon them at common law have not had the effect of giving them the right to recover from the husband damages for torts.
“The fact that the plaintiff cannot recover against her husband in this case does not, in our opinion, prevent her from recovering against the husband‘s employer.
“The law makes the master liable for the negligent injury of a third person by the master‘s servant, while acting in the course of his employment. The negligent injury is a wrong which gives to the injured person a remedy against the master. The negligent and wrongful act of the servant is deemed the act of the master. If a woman is injured by a negligent and wrongful act of a servant, the act is no less negligent and wrongful because the injured person happens to be the wife of the negligent servant. If a negligent act of a servant should result in injury to his wife and a third person, to hold that the third person could recover from the master, but the wife could not, would present, at this day and age, rather an anomalous situation, and one that would not appeal to one‘s sense of right and justice. . . .
“The cases which hold that the master‘s liability is based upon the negligence of the servant, and that the master cannot be held liable unless the servant was negligent, and that, if there can be no recovery against the servant, there can be no recovery against the master, do not sustain the defendant‘s contention. . . . Those cases decide only that, if the servant charged with doing a negligent act did not, in fact, act negligently, then the master, whose liability is founded upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, is not liable, because the alleged negligent act was not, in fact, negligence, and, as the servant was not negligent, the master cannot be held to have been negligent.
“A judgment in favor of the servant in an action against him is a bar in favor of the master, in an action against the master, not primarily because the master in such action is secondarily liable, and the servant primarily liable, but because there has been an adjudication upon the facts that there was no negligence on the part of the
servant. . . . A master‘s liability is not based primarily upon the fact that the servant, who did the negligent act, is liable over to the master for the damages which the master has been compelled to pay to the injured party. The primary liability grows out of the wrong done by the servant while acting for the master.”
The following decisions cite the Schubert case and adopt the rule which it announces; Poulin v. Graham, 102 Vt. 307, 147 Atl. 698; Hensel v. Hensel Yellow Cab Co., 209 Wis. 489, 245 N. W. 159; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Huff, 48 Ohio App. 412; 194 N. E. 429.
This brings us to a crucial question which appellant presents - Is there substantial evidence tending to show that at the time of the accident plaintiff‘s husband was operating the automobile in the service of his employer and in the course of his employment? The testimony of plaintiff and her husband was the whole of the evidence on this phase of the case. At the conclusion of the evidence on the part of plaintiff, defendant requested an instruction directing a verdict in its favor which was refused. Defendant offered no evidence, stood on its request for a directed verdict, in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, and assigns the refusal thereof by the trial court as error. A summary of the evidence, the sufficiency of which is challenged, follows: Mr. and Mrs. Mullally had married in April prior to this accident which occurred September 13, 1931. In 1931 she was forty-seven years of age and he was fifty-five years of age. Mr. Mullally had been employed by the defendant Grain Company thirty-one years. He testified: “My duties with the Langenberg Brothers Grain Company are the selling of grain, hay, securing consignments, soliciting consignments and in general operating the coarse grain department in connection with the hay business. I have entire charge of operating that department.” He stated: “The company furnished me with an automobile in connection with the business. It was a Ford Tudor sedan. (The automobile involved in this accident.) The Ford was garaged and kept at my residence. Langenberg Brothers Grain Company paid for the maintenance of the automobile, the gasoline and oil and everything that was necessary for its use. I used the automobile in the hay tracts - the selling of hay; I used it for trips to the country.” Mr. and Mrs. Mullally resided in the city of St. Louis as did Mr. and Mrs. Carton. Plaintiff, Mrs. Mullally testified, that she had known Mrs. Carton since childhood and “we were childhood friends. We both lived in Kansas City. That was my home prior to my marriage to Mr. Mullally. Mrs. Carton moved to St. Louis first. After I came to St. Louis we renewed the friendship. I visited at her home here in the city many times. They (Mr. and Mrs. Carton) have visited at my home many times. Mrs. Carton and I were the closest kind of personal friends.” The Cartons owned a summer “lodge” in St. Charles County near Portage de Sioux.
We have gone into detail and have fully set out the evidence (consisting wholly of the testimony of plaintiff and her husband) upon which plaintiff relies to show that at the time of the accident her husband was operating the automobile in the service of his employer and in the course of his employment. It seems apparent and conclusive that the inducing and controlling object and purpose of the trip and visit to the Carton lodge, from its inception to its conclusion, was personal, social and recreational. Mr. Mullally stated that the automobile was “furnished” to him by the company “in connection with the business” and that his duties were “the selling of grain, hay, soliciting consignments and in general operating the coarse grain department in connection with the hay business;” that he dictated a “market letter” three or four times a week; and that “knowledge” of crop conditions “obtained in driving through the country enables one to give an opinion as to the future of the market.” He nowhere says that he customarily, or even at any time, drove about the country for the sole purpose of observing crop conditions. He says he used the automobile in selling hay and “I used it for trips to the country.” The only inference which naturally follows is that he used the automobile in performing the duties of his employment, the selling of grain and hay and the solicitation of consignments, which took him from time to time on trips in the country and that on these trips he observed crop conditions which aided him in forming an opinion as to future market conditions. Mr. Mullally had not contemplated the doing of work or anything in connection with his employment on this Saturday afternoon. He had an engagement to play golf that afternoon. Would the contention be seriously made that had he while driving to the golf course chanced to observe a field of corn and had stopped and “looked at a couple of ears to see whether they were denting” that such act transformed his trip to the golf course and the return therefrom into a mission for his employer and that he was therefore in the course of his employment in going to and returning from the golf course? It nowhere appears that any situation arose making it either necessary or expedient that he forego the golf engagement and instead make a trip into the country in his employer‘s behalf to inspect crop conditions. The whole course of events plainly shows that Mr. and Mrs. Mullally were on pleasure and recreation bent; that he abandoned his contemplated afternoon of golf for the other form of recreation afforded by the Carton invitation to their lodge. He did not spend the afternoon or the major part driving about the country for the purpose of inspecting crop conditions but went from his home by the most direct route to the Carton lodge
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court should be reversed. It is so ordered. Hyde and Bradley, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by FERGUSON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
