Preston v. Lewis

151 P. 485 | Okla. | 1915

This action was commenced by defendant in error in a justice court of Canadian county to recover the sum of $180, in which he claims to have been damaged by reason of injuries to a team belonging to him, and the further sum of $3, claimed as the reasonable value of the services of said team. The record *755 discloses that on October 29, 1911, the plaintiff in error Charles Preston in the village of Richland, Canadian county, obtained a certain team of horses from the defendant in error, Frank Lewis, for the avowed purpose of driving, in company with the other three plaintiffs in error, to Yukon and back that night to attend a lodge meeting. After the drive was made, and the team returned to defendant in error, Lewis, it is alleged that the injuries to said team were discovered.

Plaintiffs in error, in their brief, insist that the trial court erred in permitting a misjoinder of causes of action; one of the causes beng an action in tort, and the other on implied contract. The record nowhere shows that this point was ever raised in the court below, and for that reason we shall refuse to consider it here. The liberality with which higher courts regard the matter of pleadings in justice courts did not relieve plaintiffs in error of the necessity of filing a demurrer in one of the trial courts, if they intended to urge the question of a misjoinder on appeal.

We shall now consder together the first and second assignments of error, which are based upon the court's refusal to direct the jury to return a verdict in favor of the three last-named plaintiffs in error, defendants below. The record is uncontradicted that all the negotiations relative to the letting of the team were between defendant in error Lewis and plaintiff in error Preston. The record further shows that Lewis was informed as to what Preston intended to do with the team, and who was to accompany him on the trip. The proof is conclusive that Preston took charge and control of the team when it was obtained from Lewis, and exercised complete and exclusive management and control thereof until the team *756 was returned to Lewis, doing all the driving of the team himself. The mere fact that Walker, O'Brien, and Donaghe rode in the same vehicle with Preston, and that Donaghe assisted in unhitching the team when it was returned and put in Lewis' corral, certainly would not render them liable for alleged injuries to said team resulting from hard driving. In the case of Mead v. Zang Brewing Co., 43 Colo. 1, 95 P. 284, the court says:

"To make persons jointly liable for a tort, it must appear in some way that it was the result of their joint action or joint negligence."

We think there was a complete failure of proof as to plaintiffs in error Walker, O'Brien, and Donaghe, and the county court should have directed the jury to return a verdict in their favor, and committed error in overruling their motions for directed verdicts.

We recommend that the judgment of the county court of Canadian county be therefore reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.

By the Court: It is so ordered. *757