Lead Opinion
— This is a suit for damages suffered by plaintiff under the following circumstances:
The defendant Western Union Telegraph Company is a New York corporation engaged in the business of receiving, transmitting and delivering communications by telegraph between different places in the United States, including the city of St. Louis, in which it had offices for that purpose, among which was an office on the southwest corner of Olive Street and Grand Avenue. Olive Street, at that place, extends east and west while Grand Avenue crosses it, ■ extending north and south. The defendant Kenzell, at the time of the injury, which occurred about December. 28, 1912, was a messenger boy sixteen years old, in its service, whose duty it was to deliver telegrams. The evidence tends to show that about seven o’clock in the evening of that day the plaintiff was standing on Grand Avenue in front of the show window of a candy store on the southeast corner, waiting for an approaching automobile to pass, so that she could step down into the street and cross to the southwest corner, on which the telegraph office was situated. A news boy with a bundle of papers under his arm stood on the sidewalk about seven feet north of her when the defendant Kenzell came running from the east along the sidewalk on the south side of Olive Street with a telegram in his hand, and said to the news boy “give me a paper.” The news boy refused, when Kenzell snatched one from the bundle and ran, looking over his shoulder, and collided with plaintiff with such force that she was
On the other hand, neither beasts nor inanimate things participate in these public uses of their own right, but only have status in the public highway by right of their owners. For this reason one who employs a beast upon the street must do so under such management and control as will provide reasonably for the safety of persons and their property. • Had this boy
These principles are familiar to all, and are firmly embedded in the foundation of our jurisprudence, and we would not feel that it is necessary to mention them were it not tfiat this unfortunate accident has already been the subject of'adjudication by an appellate court of this State in a suit brought by the husband of plaintiff (Phillips v. Western Union Telegraph Company,
Eespondent’s counsel meets these simple rules with the proposition that human legs, while safe and proper instruments of transportation when carefully used, are, like automobiles and other things of a similar nature, dangerous when used negligently, and that the master has as much control over thé legs of his servant as over his own animal or machine; and cites Ryan v. Keane,
The respondent has also cited the decision of this court In Banc in Maniaci v. Interurban Express Co.,
There is nothing in any of these authorities which applies the doctrine of respondeat siiperior, or the principles on which it rests, to the facts of this case as already stated, and we are not surprised that the diligent search indicated by the briefs of eminent counsel in this case have failed to disclose one. Had the messenger
We have already referred to the paucity of authority upon the liability of the master for the use by his servant of the public street. The most of us frequently send our servants to the post office or the store, or, if we have no one regularly employed to do these errands, expend a nickel or a dime for a special messenger for such purposes. Traveling salesmen in the employ of com-, mercial houses go from store to store and house to house in the pursuance of their calling. Boys engaged in this’ employment frequently encounter their juvenile enemies and we, who employ them, do not think of worrying over our financial responsibility for the result.
Nor are we prepared to hold that a corporation is, in this resjject, subject to'a more stringent rule of liability than a natural,person,
The judgment of the circuit court for the city of St. Louis is therefore reversed.
— The foregoing opinion of Brown, C., is adopted by the Court In Banc as the opinion of said court.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting)-. — I dissent from the majority opinion for the reason that the same rule of law applies to the facts of this case as if the injury had been inflicted by an automobile instead of being caused by the messenger’s body negligently coining in physical contact with the plaintiff. The messenger was performing the master’s business at the time he injured the plaintiff, and had it not been for that fact he would not have been pursuing the journey which resulted in the injury, and the mere fact that he sidestepped a few feet to gratify some personal desire does not change the rule. In that case, as in this, he would have been about the master’s business and the negligence in the one is identical with that in the other; the authorities cited abundantly so hold.
