158 Wis. 165 | Wis. | 1914
The following opinion was filed June 17, 1914:
The evidence most favorable to the plaintiff tends to establish these facts: On August 6, 1912, the defendant Trokey, who was then in the employ of the defendant 'Marshall-Wells Hardware Company as a traveling salesman, visited the village of Brule for the purpose of soliciting orders for his house, including orders for firearms and ammunition, carrying 'with him a sample twenty-two caliber Stevens rifle. About ten minutes after 10' o’clock in the forenoon he went to the hardware.store of one Christ Lustig, to whom he had previously sold goods. lie waited in the store about fifteen minutes for a chance to transact business with Mr. Lustig, who was during that time busy with customers. After waiting for this length of time Trokey bought a box of cartridges at Lustig’s store, went out into the back yard of the store building, and engaged in shooting with the sample rifle which he carried. Part of the time Oharles Lustig, a son of the hardware merchant and about seventeen years of age, who acted as a clerk and general helper in his father’s store, went out of the store and did some shooting with Trokey. Some shooting was also done by a Mr. Ingalls, another traveling salesman, who was in Brule that day. The shooting was more or less continuous from the time it began until the time of the accident, which occurred about ten minutes to 1 in the afternoon. At that time the plaintiff, who was standing near the pump close by his house a distance of somewhat over 100 feet from Mr. Lustig’s store, was struck by a bullet in the left side. Some of the shooting was done from behind Mr. Lustig’s store, some from the front of Wyant’s saloon near by, and some from the road running north and south, east of Wyant’s saloon. The fact that plaintiff was injured was not known to any one who participated in the shooting until a short time afterwards. Among the different objects
A number of errors are assigned relating to the admission of evidence and the failure to submit the real issue to the jury as well as the error in refusing to direct a verdict in favor of appellant. We shall consider only the latter. In so doing we shall bear in mind that the testimony of Trokey to the effect that he was shooting for pastime only and the testimony of the sales manager that Trokey was not expected or required to demonstrate guns is not controlling upon the question of whether or not he was acting within the scope of his employment while shooting. If the facts and circumstances surrounding the shooting fairly rebut such testimony the jury might well find that it was not true. Or it might find that he was acting within the scope of his employment even though disobeying orders from his employer. Ratcliffe v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 153 Wis. 281, 141 N. W. 229. But the testimony cannot be disregarded entirely, and it raises the presumption that Trokey while shooting was acting outside the scope of his employment, which presumption must be overcome by facts and circumstances shown by the evidence in order to entitle plaintiff to recover. Johnson v. Ætna L. Ins. Co., ante, p. 56, 147 N. W. 32. Does the evidence rebut the presumption that the shooting was for pastime only ? AA^hen it is considered that Christ Lustig did not participate in the shooting, did not observe it, and was not informed as to its result; that Charles Lustig was only a seventeen-year-old boy who helped his father in the hardware business but was not shown to have any authority to buy goods; that Ingalls and Wyant had no interest as prospective
By the Court. — Judgment reversed as to the appellant, Marshall-Wells Hardware Company, and cause remanded with directions to dismiss the action as to it.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on October 6, 1914.