37 Minn. 517 | Minn. | 1887
Action for a trespass in taking hay from plaintiff’s barn. The taking was not by defendant in person, but by his servant, and the proofs show that the latter was not expressly authorized by defendant to take it; and the defendant is not liable unless there was implied authority, — that is, unless the act of taking the hay was within the scope of the servant’s authority. The facts are that the servant was driving a team for defendant on the road and in the woods, which was all that he was employed to do. Near
We see nothing in this like a ratification of the act of the servant, if it was unauthorized. A majority of the court are of opinion that, from the facts above stated, it might fairly be found that providing food for the team was an act contemplated by the servant’s employment; and, if so, that the defendant would be liable for the use by the servant of unlawful means to accomplish that end, and that the taking of the hay for the purpose of feeding to the horses was within the line of his employment. But I do not see anything in the case to indicate that providing food for the horses was any part of the servant’s business, and therefore I am of opinion that taking the hay was an act for which his employer was not liable.
The majority of the court are of opinion that the statute (Gen. St. 1878, o. 66, §§ 269, 270) imposing treble damages for trespasses upon certain kinds of personal property, being highly penal in its nature, ought not to apply in a case like this, where defendant is deemed in law to have committed the trespass only by reason of his relation to the actual trespasser.
The court below will modify its judgment so as to render judgment only for the single damages found.