164 N.W. 679 | N.D. | 1916
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from the final judgment and from an order denying motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict will be first inquired into.
The action arose out of the killing of James Franklin Boss on March 11, 1911, by McLain S. Cooper, the twenty-one-year-old son of defendant, Harry J. Cooper. Plaintiff is the widow of deceased. Boss, with his wife and family, had worked for defendant for more than two years, living on defendant’s farm. The homicide occurred on said farm in Traill county. Defendant was South for the winter, and at no time in controversy was present at, or had knowledge of, events transpiring and upon which this action is based. On leaving for the South for the winter defendant had told Boss that “McLain Cooper would be on the farm that winter; that he (defendant) would be too far away to communicate with, and if anything out of the ordinary came up to go to McLain; I wasn’t anticipating anything out of the ordinary coming up.”
Otherwise Boss was in charge as farm foreman. McLain Cooper had been on the farm prior to that winter and was there during that winter. On March 11, 1911, at about 7 o’clock in the morning, McLain Cooper discharged Boss after shooting three times at him. While Boss was afterward walking to the dwelling house some hundred yards away, McLain Cooper overtook him and, without warning, shot Boss through the back, mortally wounding him.
The complaint predicates liability upon the fact that the son had been left “to manage and control the operation of said farm, with full and complete authority and power to hire, employ, and discharge such servants, agents, and employees as he, McLain Cooper, might deem necessary and convenient; that on March 11, 1911, McLain Cooper in exercise of the power delegated to and vested in him by the defendant, did discharge Boss from the employment of the defendant, and while so exercising such power and authority and while Boss was peaceably preparing to leave, and without giving Boss the slightest chance to leave
Damages in the sum of $50,000 is demanded. A verdict for plaintiff for $3,500 was returned. The answer admits Eoss was the servant of the defendant, as superintendent of said farm, when killed, “and that after the 13th day of December, 1910, he so worked and labored under the charge and authority of said McLain Cooper by virtue of the employment of said McLain Cooper by his father, and that he so ■continued to render service until March 11, 1911.” The answer further admits “that on March 11,1911, McLain Cooper, in the exercise of the power delegated to and invested in him by Harry J. Cooper, did discharge Eoss from the employment of said Harry J. Cooper, and admits that on March 11, 1911, McLain Cooper did shoot and mortally wound Eoss. But defendant denies that said McLain Cooper proceeded to ■eject Eoss from said farm at the time, and denies that said McLain Cooper shot or wounded Eoss while engaged in ejecting Eoss from said farm, or while acting for Harry J". Cooper or within the scope of his ■employment, or while exercising any power or authority conferred upon him by this defendant or by virtue of his employment or agency.”
This presents the issues. In brief, the employment of both Eoss and McLain Cooper as employees of defendant, Harry J. Cooper, is admitted, as is the fact that the son had due authority to and did in the ■exercise thereof discharge Eoss from defendant’s employment. As defendant by his motion for judgment non obstamki has challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain plaintiff’s cause of action on the merits, and asserts that it affirmatively discloses no cause of action, all the evidence bearing on the discharge will now be set forth.
Plaintiff’s case is made up of the dying declaration of Eoss, narrating his employment and events up to and surrounding the shooting. It reads:
“The way this trouble started on the 10th of March, 1911, this Jack
Tbe court gave tbe following instructions:
“The liability of tbe master for intentional acts which constitute legal wrongs can only arise when that which is done is within tbe real or apparent scope of tbe master’s business.. It does not arise where tbe servant has stepped aside from bis employment to commit a wrong which tbe master neither directed in fact, nor could be supposed from -the nature of bis employment to have authorized or expected tbe servant to do; and where a servant steps aside from tbe performance of tbe business for which be was employed by bis principal and embarks upon a matter of bis own, tbe principal is not liable for tbe consequences of tbe agent’s act while so engaged. If, while engaged in tbe execution •of tbe employment of tbe principal, be so conducts himself, whether negligently or maliciously, so as to injure another, bis principal will be liable. If, however, be forsakes such employment, and purely, ^for bis own benefit or to gratify some personal bate, does an act uncon
“As I have said before if McLain Cooper forsook his employment purely for his own benefit or to gratify some personal hate, and shot. Eoss, then his father would not be liable. I cannot impress too strongly upon the minds of the jury that great importance of determining just when the act of discharge was complete, because this case must go one way or the other measured from such point of time; for, whenever the servant stepped aside from his master’s business for however short a time and committed a wrong not connected with such business, the relation of master and servant is suspended. ... If you find from the evidence, that at the time of the shooting Eoss, McLain Cooper was in the act of discharging Eoss, then I charge you as a matter of
. These instructions are correct. But was there any substantial proof to warrant such instructions? If the evidence can be said to present-a basis for them, the verdict should stand; if not, it must fall.
With these issues in mind, the evidence will be scrutinized. It will be assumed here as it was assumed on trial, that the right to discharge Ross necessarily carried with it the right to use reasonable force to eject him from the premises if necessary, as a responsibility naturally following from the exercise of the right to discharge. Penas v. Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. 112 Minn. 203, 30 L.R.A.(N.S.) 621, 121 N. W. 026. Although upon this question there seems to be some conflict in the authorities, whether the presumption of right to use force can be indulged here without proof. Labatt, Mast. & S. § 2531. The question then resolves to whether Cooper killed Ross in discharging him from defendant’s employment, or an incident to effecting such discharge or in ejecting Ross from the premises afterward. If so, or if there is sufficient evidence to fairly warrant that deduction, the verdict must stand. But if McLain Cooper had no such intent, but merely executed his own design to injure, or without any definite purpose shot in reckless disregard of whether or not he killed Ross, the verdict should be set aside. And this, too, even though Cooper used as a pretense or as an excuse therefor his right and authority to discharge Ross. If the servant “is authorized to use force against another when necessary in executing his master’s orders, the master commits it to him to decide what degree of force he shall use; and if, through misjudgment or violence of temper, he goes beyond the necessity of the occasion and gives a right of action to another, he cannot, as to third persons, be said to have been acting without the line of his duty, or to have departed from his master’s business. If, however, the servant under guise and cover of executing his master’s orders, and exercising the authority conferred upon him, wilfully and designedly, for the purpose of accomplishing his own independent, malicious, or wicked purposes, does an injury to another, then the master is not liable. The relation of master and servant, as to that transaction, does not exist between them. . . . And when it is said that the master is not responsible for the wilful wrong of the servant, the language is to be understood as referring to
"What, then, was McLain Cooper’s intent that morning in doing the things he did ? Is it a fair inference under the proof that he intended by such acts to accomplish the discharge of Ross, and that he shot Ross in furtherance thereof ? Or was he engaged in wreaking vengeance and doing Ross injury ? Giving full faith and credence to every statement in the dying declaration of Ross, it tends to entirely exculpate defendant from liability. He repeats that the slight difficulty of the night before the shooting was the first trouble he had ever had with young Cooper. Hence, it must be that Cooper had no reason for enmity and held no grudge against Ross, and that, as Ross asserts, the trouble really began that night. This comparatively trivial affair was the provocation and moving cause of the occurrence early next morning. Nothing intervened between the night before and 7 o’clock in the morning, when, as Ross says, he “ran into the gun” in the hand of Cooper, in the barn, accompanied with his threat, “I’m going to shoot you,”' followed with immediate action in execution of such declared intent by the taking of two shots at Ross while the latter’s back was turned toward him, as he was getting out of sight; pursuit followed, and an instant later a third shot was taken at Ross in the sheep shed. Ross then realized that young Cooper meant what he said when he declared he was going to shoot him. He in effect said so to Hulet in the words, “it is getting too hot here for me.” Hp to that time there had been no-attempt at discharge of Ross from defendant’s employment; not a word said about that, but instead his every move up to that moment evidenced a deliberate premeditated purpose and intent to do Ross great
These are the facts as narrated by Eoss, and the only evidence bearing on the shooting. It establishes the commission of a cold-blooded deliberate killing with malice aforethought, with every ingredient present of murder in the first degree, including a deliberate and premeditated intent to kill; to do exactly what was done. 'The expression, “I
It may be assumed, however, that when Eoss was told to leave the place Cooper was for the time exercising the powers of the master. It does not follow that, upon renewal of the malicious assault, that he was then continuing to perform the master’s business. The contrary is the record, Eoss says, “I started for the house for my coat, and got down •quite aways before he caught up with me, and I didn’t expect him to shoot or anything, and I wasn’t looking.” The map in evidence establishes the distance traveled during the interval as at least 160 feet. It was 159 feet from the nearest corner of the sheep shed to where Eoss fell. The situation is analogous to where a brakeman or conductor after ejecting a passenger leaves the train at such a distance and in pursuit of his own quarrel, maliciously assaults another. Such an assault is deemed to be the personal act of a servant, and not the act of the master. “Where an appreciable interval intervenes between the acts of protection which are exercised by persons in the guarding of property of their employers and a malicious assault which they afterwards commit, the assault will be deemed to be a personal act of the servant, and not an act of the employer.” Syllabus in Kinnonen v. Great Northern R. Co. 34 N. D. 556, 158 N. W. 1058, citing Spencer v. Kelley (C. C.) 32 Fed. 838; Roberts v. Southern R. Co. 143 N. C. 176, 8 L.R.A.(N.S.) 789, 55 S. E. 509, 10 Ann. Cas. 375, to which might
Most certainly it is a dangerous rule of perhaps far-reaching consequences that would be declared by this precedent should the employer be held in damages for this murder committed by the employee under the ■circumstances in evidence. It is going beyond all rules of liability to permit such a bare conjecture, that the homicide was done in furtherance of any duty to the master, to stand as a finding of fact, where as here a wilful, deliberated, premeditated killing resulted, and where ■every act done bespoke a defined purpose and intent in the assailant, born of his own malice to injure or kill another.
That the cause of the quarrel of the night before was the milking of the cow or delaying supper, and concerned the business of the master, is wholly immaterial. That business was a closed incident, having no relation in law to subsequent events, except as it furnished the motive .and engendered the hatred that gave vent in murder the next morning. Alabama & V. R. Co. v. Harz, 88 Miss. 681, 42 So. 201, and Lotz v. Hanlon, 217 Pa. 339, 10 L.R.A.(N.S.) 202, 118 Am. St. Rep. 922, 66 Atl. 525, 10 Ann. Cas. 731; Steffen v. McNaughton, 142 Wis. 49, 26 L.R.A.(N.S.) 382, 124 N. W. 1016, 19 Ann. Cas. 1227; Danforth
For the purposes of this decision placed upon the facts recited in the dying declaration, it has been assumed that such declaration is admissible in this civil action over all objections taken. Its admissibility is not determined, but is assumed as unnecessary of decision here. However, it may be observed that beyond all question the great weight of precedent is against the admission of dying declarations in civil cases. Against admission see Barfield v. Britt, 47 N. C. (2 Jones, L.) 41, 62 Am. Dec. 190; Jackson ex dem. Coe v. Kniffen, 3 Johns. 31, 3 Am. Dec. 390, in which Justice Kent participated; Thayer v. Lombard, 165 Mass. 174, 52 Am. St. Rep. 507, 42 N. E. 563; People v. Hodgdon, 55 Cal. 72, 36 Am. Rep. 30; People v. Stison, 140 Mich. 216, 112 Am. St. Rep. 397, 103 N. W. 542, 6 Ann. Cas. 69; State v. Meyer, 64 N. J. L. 382, 45 Atl. 779; Daily v. New York & N. H. R. Co. 32 Conn. 356, 87 Am. Dec. 176, and other cases cited in extensive note in 56 L.R.A. 353, and Bionto v. Illinois C. R. Co. 125 La. 147, 27 L.R.A.(N.S.) 1030, 51 So. 98; and Yates v. Huntsville Hoop & Heading Co. — Ala. —, 39 So. 647 and Escalier v. Great Northern R. Co. 46 Mont. 238, 127 Pac. 458, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 468. For admission see Thurston v. Fritz, 50 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1167 and note (91 Kan. 468, 138 Pac. 625).
There was no issue of fact under the evidence upon which, under the instructions given and the law applicable, the defendant could be held liable for the consequences of young Cooper’s felonious conduct,
Rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing.
In this ease a rehearing was ordered and had before the court as now constituted; and, after a full and careful consideration of the questions involved, a majority of the court is of the opinion that the former decision prepared by Mr. Justice Goss is correct, and must stand.
The proposition has been advanced that McLain Cooper was a vice principal, and that therefore Harry J. Cooper would be responsible for the wrongful acts committed by him. It is clear that. McLain Cooper was a superior servant or vice principal. In fact, this proposition has never been denied by anyone. But it seems equally clear that this fact does not in any manner change the legal principles upon which defendant’s liability in this case must be determined. A servant represents and acts for the master in the performance of those duties which have been intrusted to him. And when a master has delegated to his servant certain duties to perform, or intrusted him with certain business to transact, the master becomes liable for the acts of this servant in the course of such employment. When a master employs a servant to supervise, oversee, give orders to, and generally manage, other servants in the performance of certain work, he becomes what is known as a superior servant or vice principal, and represents his master in his dealings with the subordinate servants in the course of the work to be performed. And the courts have generally held that, in the performance of such duties, the superior servant or vice principal .represents his master, and is therefore not a fellow servant, so as to exempt the master from liability under the fellow servant doctrine. And it is therefore generally held that the master is liable to subordinate servants for injuries sustained by reason of any act performed, or duty neglected, by such superior servant within the course of his employment. The mere engagement of a superior servant or vice principal does not, however, render a master liable for all his acts. The liability of the master still depends upon whether the acts upon which liability are predicated were incidental to the discharge of the functions of the vice principal. That is, the acts complained of must have some
The proposition has also been advanced that the defendant was negligent in intrusting the management of the farm to McLain Cooper. While there were certain allegations in the complaint tending to predicate liability on this ground, it was conceded on the oral argument that no evidence was introduced to substantiate these allegations. And an examination of the record shows that not one word of testimony was offered tending to show that McLain Cooper had ever during his entire life by any word, act, or deed shown himself unfitted for the position in which he was placed by his father. Under these circumstances, not only was this ground of liability not substantiated by evidence, but it must be assumed that the plaintiff was unable to produce any evidence in support of such alleged ground of liability.
It will be noted from the former opinion that the question of the admissibility of the so-called dying declarations was not expressly passed upon, although it was intimated that such declarations are inadmissible in civil actions. The principal reason for the admissibility of dying declarations is what has been termed the “principle of necessity;” that is, if such declarations were not admitted in evidence, it would be impossible to produce any other evidence from the same source, that is, from the declarant. Wigmore, Ev. §§ 1421, 1436. Manifestly, this reason does not exist and cannot be invoked for the introduction of the dying declarations in the instant case. The shooting took place on March 11, 1911. The so-called dying declaration was
We are agreed that the former opinion must stand.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The case presented to^his court involves an appeal from the final judgment, and also from an order denying motion for a judgment non obstante.
The case is one of great importance and vast and far-reaching consequence; and, in order that a correct and full understanding of the issues involved may be readily comprehended, we deem it advisable to set out in full the pleadings. The complaint is as follows:
“The plaintiff for a cause of action against the defendant herein complains and alleges:
“That the defendant Harry J. Cooper for a great many years prior to, and at the time of, the commission of the grievances hereinafter mentioned, owned, used, and operated a large farm known as the West Cooper farm, situated, lying, and being in the county of Traill, in the state of North Dakota, and particularly described as follows, to wit: All of sections nine (9) and seventeen (17), and the north half (N-iO of section twenty (20), in township one hundred forty-five (145), north of range fifty-one (51), west of the fifth principal meridian.
“That the said defendant Harry J. Cooper, during all the times herein mentioned, was also the owner of a great deal of personal property, by him used in the operation and management of said farm, and consisting of horses, cattle, sheep, hogs, and other domestic animals, and farm implements and machinery of great variety, and including particularly threshing machines, binders, drills, plows, mowers, wagons, buggies, and other like property.
“That said defendant Harry J. Cooper is also the owner of other real and personal property in great abundance, the particular description of which is to this plaintiff unknown.
“That the value of the real and personal property so owned by the defendant, Harry T. Cooper, exceeds the sum of $100,000.
“That the defendant McLain S. Cooper is the son of said Harry J. Cooper, and he also is the owner of an abundance of property, the
“That on the 13th day of December, a. d. 1910, the defendant Harry J. Cooper employed his said son, the said McLain S. Cooper, to manage and control the operation of the so-called ‘West Cooper farm,’ described in the first paragraph of this complaint, and hired and engaged him to take charge of, care for, guard, protect, handle, and operate the same and all the personal property thereon, thereunto belonging and used in connection therewith; and at said time, for such purpose, did install him, the said McLain S. Cooper, in full and complete possession, and place him in supreme and active control, charge, and custody thereof, with full and complete authority, power, and jurisdiction to hire, employ, and discharge such assistants, servants, agents, and employees as he, the said McLain S. Cooper, might deem necessary or convenient; and did in all things grant and intrust unto the said McLain S. Cooper as full and complete power and authority as he the said Harry J. Cooper had in and about the premises.
“That at the time of the commission of the grievances hereinafter mentioned, and for more than two years prior thereto, this plaintiff’s husband, James Franklin Eoss, for hire and reward, was the servant and employee of the said Harry J. Cooper, in, on, and about the said West Cooper farm, and was, during said time, there faithfully engaged in the performance of his duties in connection with said farm, as superintendent thereof, and since the said 13th day of December, a. d. 1910, so worked and labored, under the charge and authority of the said McLain S. Cooper, by virtue of the employment of the said McLain S. Cooper by his father, as set forth in the 6th paragraph hereof, and so continued to render service as aforesaid until the 11th day of March, a. d. 1911.
“That on the said 11th day of March, a. d. 1911, the said McLain S. Cooper, in the exercise of the power and authority so delegated to, and vested in, him, by the said Harry J. Cooper, did discharge the said James Franklin Eoss from the said employment of the said Harry J. Cooper, and while so exercising such power and authority, and while the said James Franklin Eoss was peaceably preparing to leave, and without giving him, the said James Franklin Eoss, the slightest chance to leave said farm and employment peaceably, proceeded to eject him
“That during all the times herein mentioned the defendant McLain S. Cooper was a man of violent temper, quarrelsome disposition, and a turbulent character, accustomed to carry firearms and other dangerous weapons, and disposed to use them on, and otherwise maltreat, both man and beast.
“That the defendant Harry J. Cooper on the said 13th day of December, a. d. 1910, when he placed the said McLain S. Cooper in supreme authority and control on said farm, and over said James Franklin Ross, well knew that his said son, the said McLain S. Cooper, was possessed of such temper, disposition, character, and habits, and he has so known all of such facts during all the times herein referred to.
“That since the commission of the grievances hereinbefore referred to, up to, and after the death of the said James Franklin Ross, the defendant Harry J. Cooper has in all things and in every manner,
“That tbe plaintiff herein is tbe surviving wife of tbe said James Franklin Eoss, and at tbe time of bis death she was, and for more than six years prior thereto, bad been, bis lawful wife.
“That at tbe time of bis death said James Franklin Eoss was forty-one years, five months and eighteen days of age; and at tbe time of tbe shooting aforesaid, and for many years prior thereto, be bad been capable of, and was earning an income of from $1,500 to $2,000 per-year.
“That, besides this plaintiff, bis widow, tbe said James Franklin Eoss, left surviving him bis son Harry, about six years of age, and an adopted daughter, Ethel, about eleven years old.
“That this plaintiff and said children were entirely dependent upon tbe said James Franklin Eoss for their support, sustenance, maintenance, nurture, and education, which has been lost by bis death.
“That by reason thereof, they have also lost bis company, society, and counsel.
“That tbe death of her said husband, tbe said James Franklin Eoss,. ' has also caused this plaintiff intense grief, resulting in actual physical illness.
“That by reason of tbe premises, this plaintiff has been damaged by tbe death of tbe said James Franklin Eoss as aforesaid in tbe sum of $50,000.
“Wherefore, plaintiff demands judgment against tbe defendants: (1) For tbe sum of $50,000; (2) for her costs and disbursements in this action; (3) for such other and further relief as may seem just, and equitable in tbe premises.”
Tbe answer to such' complaint is as follows:
“Now comes tbe defendant Harry J. Cooper, and for bis answer to tbe complaint of the plaintiff herein, admits the allegations of paragraphs 1, 2, 6, 12, and 14 of said complaint.
“Admits that for more than two years prior to tbe transactions alleged in said complaint to have taken place on tbe 11th day of March,*202 1911, James Franklin Eoss was the servant and employee for hire of the said Harry J. Cooper, in, on, and about the West Cooper farm, as superintendent thereof, and that after the 13th day of December, 1910, he so worked and labored under the charge and authority of the said McLain S. Cooper, by virtue of the employment of said McLain S. Cooper by his father, and that he so continued to render service until the 11th day of March, 1911.
“Admits that on the 11th day of March, 1911, the said McLain S. Cooper, in the exercise of the power delegated to, and invested in, him by the said Harry J. Cooper, did discharge the said Boss from the employment of the said Harry J. Cooper.
“Admits that on the 11th day of March, 1911, the said McLain S. Cooper, did shoot and mortally wound the said Eoss with a revolver then and there loaded with gunpowder and leaden bullets and held in the hands of the said McLain S. Cooper, and by him shot off and discharged at and into the body of the said Eoss, in the thoracic region of the spine, thereby and therewith inflicting upon the person and body of the said Eoss a mortal wound, of which wound the said Eoss subsequently, and on the 6th day of August, 1911, died. But this defendant denies that the said McLain S. Cooper proceeded to eject said Eoss from said farm at the time, in the manner or under the conditions and circumstances alleged in said complaint, or at all; and denies that the said McLain S. Cooper assaulted, shot, or wounded the said Eoss while engaged in ejecting said Eoss from said farm or while acting for this defendant, Harry J. Cooper, or within the scope of his employment, or while exercising any power or authority conferred upon him by this defendant or by virtue of his employment or agency. Denies that he, the said McLain S. Cooper, assaulted, shot, or wounded the said Eoss in disregard of the safety of said Eoss, or without cause, excuse, or justification; denies that the said McLain S. Cooper assaulted, shot, or wounded the said Eoss with unnecessary violence, wilfully, intentionally, maliciously, or unlawfully. But this defendant alleges that the said McLain S. Cooper shot and wounded the said Eoss in the lawful defense of his own person, at a time when he believed and had reasonable grounds to apprehend that the said Eoss intended to do him great bodily injury, and there was imminent danger of such intention being accomplished.
*203 “Admits that McLain S. Cooper is the son of this defendant, but denies that he is the owner of any property whatsoever.
“Denies that the value of the real and personal property owned by this defendant exceeds the sum of $100,000, and alleges that the value of such property over and above his just debts and liabilities does not exceed the sum of $15,000.
“Denies the allegations of paragraphs 3, 9, 10, 11, 15, 16 and 17 of said complaint.
“Denies that he has any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the allegations contained in paragraph 13 of said complaint.
“Denies that the plaintiff, by reason of any of the matters or things alleged in said complaint, has been damaged in the sum of $50,000, or in any other sum whatsoever.
“Denies each and every allegation in said complaint contained not hereinbefore admitted, or specifically denied.
“Wherefore, this defendant respectfully asks that the plaintiff’s complaint be dismissed, and that he do have judgment against plaintiff for his costs and disbursements herein.”
The facts in the case which are material are substantially as follows: The plaintiff, Mary Ross, is the surviving widow of one James Franklin Ross, who formerly lived with her husband upon a farm known as the Cooper farm, near the city of Hillsboro, North Dakota. The plaintiff was born on the 1st day of January, 1878, and on the 11th day of June, 1904, was married to James Franklin Ross. At the time of their marriage Ross was working in a livery stable in Fargo, but later worked on a farm near Argusville, where Mrs. Ross also worked. It seems they had worked on that farm prior to the time of their marriage. Afterwards they worked for a person named Eggert on a farm near Davenport, where Ross was foreman. It appears that in the fall of 1907 Mrs. Ross went to Minnesota near where her people lived at Beaulieau, and she did not see Ross, her husband, until she came to the Cooper farm near Hillsboro in October, 1908. At about such time or shortly thereafter arrangements were made by which Ross and his wife entered the employment of Harry J. Cooper, who is the defendant in this case. Ross became foreman of a large farm which
On the evening of the 10th of March, 1911, there was some trouble between McLain Cooper and James Franklin Ross. There appears to have been some trouble about the milking of a cow and some talle about sending such cow doAvn to the Sutton farm. McLain Cooper and James Franklin Ross on the evening of March 10th seem to have had a personal encounter, which, hoAvever, does not appear to have been very vicious and of any great consequence, except there was a clinch and they went to the ground, and Ross appears to have choked McLain Cooper some at this time. On the morning of March 11th, and soon after breakfast, Mrs. Ross heard a shot fired. She went out of the house and through the door on the east side of the main building into the shed, and through the door on the south side of the shed, then around and north along the east side of the shed to the northeast corner, of the building in which she lived. When she reached that spot she saw her husband lying alongside the beaten path which leads from the gate
We will now proceed to analyze the legal propositions involved in this case. The first question presented to this court is, Are declarations made in extremity, when a person is at the point of death, when •death is imminent and certain and the mind is induced by every consideration to speak the truth, and the occasion is so solemn and influencing in its effect as to be considered equivalent to an obligation imposed by an oath administered by a court of justice or one having authority to administer an oath, admissible in the trial of a civil action ? While authorities differ materially on this subject, we think the liberal rule, the one founded in reason and justice, and the one tending to establish and promote justice, is the rule that admits dying declarations as proper evidence in either criminal cases or in civil actions, and this •even if the exigencies of the case do not require it; that is, even though the matter to which the dying declaration relates might and could be proved by other competent testimony. The theory upon which dying declarations are admitted as competent testimony is that they are part of the res gestee. One of the leading cases holding that such dying declarations are competent testimony as part of the res gestee is Travellers’ Ins. Co. v. Mosley, 8 Wall. 397, 19 L. ed. 437. Mr. Justice ■Swayne, speaking for the majority of the court, said: “In the complexity of human affairs, what is done and what is said are often so related that neither can be detached without leaving the residue fragmentary and distorted. There may be fraud and falsehood as to both, but there is no ground of objection to one that does not exist equally
The time when the declaration is made is really not of as much, importance as the condition of the declarant, which may be such that the desire and opportunity for premeditation and fabrication is, entirely precluded; and where a statement has been elicited by questions from a third party, when opportunity for premeditation and fabrication is absent, which is true of the case at bar, such statements, have the quality of spontaneity and reliability, and are competent testi
The dying declaration in this case is as follows:
“My name is James Franklin Ross. I was born in Cleveland, Ohio,, February 18, 1870. I wasn’t there over nine months — less than a year. My mother died and my father moved away when I was less than a year old. My father has been dead some years. He died along about 1890, 1 think. From Ohio we moved to Lafayette, Indiana. We were there only a short time and went to Missouri. I was something like*208 four years old when we moved to Missouri. From Missouri we went to Independence, Kansas, where I lived in the country on a farm. My father was a farmer. I left home when I was thirteen years old, and come up to Storm Lake, Iowa, where I worked on a farm. I was at Storm Lake, Iowa, about two years working on a farm all the time. From there 1 come up to St. Paul and was traveling around through Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Dakota, back and forth, working in the woods and taking in the harvest and threshing, working on farms. I have worked on farms mostly, nearly all my life has been spent on a farm, except winters working in the woods. I came to North Dakota in 1888, I think; in the fall of 1888, for harvesting and threshing. I was in Montana a couple of years teaming, hauling supplies up in the mountains. With the exception of the time that I was in Montana, I have lived in North Dakota, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. During these different times I have worked on a farm in the summer time, and in the winter time in the woods. I am a married man. My wife’s name was Mary Terway. We were married in June, 1901; I wouldn’t just say the date; it slipped my memory. I have been married only once. I know Harry J. Cooper. I have known him about two years and a half. I worked for him about that long on the farm. He has a farm of his own. He has two sections and a half out here. He did have a quarter right out here. His farm is 2 miles south and about 6 miles west from Hillsboro. The other quarter that he had was a half .a mile south and 1 mile west. That is sold. It was sold while I was working on the other farm, the farm I described as being 2 miles south and 6 miles west. Mr. Cooper is a married man, and has a family, — ■ his wife, two daughters, and one son. The son’s name is McLain S. Cooper. He lived on this farm, the quarter, the first six months I worked for him, and then he boarded here in town, and then in the ■spring he sold the quarter, and then he went on to the Sutton farm, where he was superintendent. In 1910 I was on the two places and Harry J. Cooper was on the Sutton farm until February and then he moved to town, — to Hillsboro, and then I chased around from one farm to the other. From about the middle of November, 1910, and on during the time that I was there, he was not at the farm. He was in Florida and Georgia. His wife and youngest daughter were with him. The other daughter is married and living up here at Inkster, North*209 Dakota. The boy, McLain Cooper, was on the west farm during the time that Harry J. Cooper was down South. He boarded with us on the farm. My wife was working on the Cooper farm. I was foreman there. I was foreman two years. I was not foreman the first six months I was there, but after I had been there six months I was hired as a foreman on the farm. Harry J. Cooper never was on the farm during the time I was foreman, except that he would drive out to the farm once in a while. McLain Cooper, during the time I was foreman on the farm, was there from April, last year, until this spring. I and my folks belonged to the Methodist Church. I was working on the Cooper farm on the 10th day of March. The 11th was the day I quit work about half-past 7. The 10th of March, 1911, was Friday. McLain Cooper was at the farm at that time; he was there taking care of some lambs. Up to the 10th of March, 1911, McLain Cooper and I would sometimes speak to one another and sometimes we didn’t. Sometimes he would come along and speak to you and sometimes he wouldn’t and pass right along. There was no particular trouble at all before that time. He had a bunch of sheep that he bought; he had a bunch of full-blooded Hampshire sheep, he had about eighty, and they put up a new'- building for them and they put him up a bedroom for himself, with the sheep. Sometimes he would go away nights and we wouldn’t see him next day until 10 or 11 o’clock. I hadn’t had any trouble with McLain Cooper during the time I was there up to the 10th of March. During that time I was hired as foreman and I had charge of the farm. On the evening of the 10th of March, 1911, we had some trouble. My wife had been sick quite a while, and he never wanted to go to meals, and every place I ever worked I always had a meal hour, summer and winter. Take it out there, we had our regular hours, and I was down here for Billy Herman four years and a half, 2 miles east of Argus-ville, where I was straw boss and working on the farm, and we had our regular meal hours. During the time I was at the Cooper farm we had breakfast in the summer time at half-past 5 and supper — well that would depend on where we was working. We had some lands where we would have to go 2 miles. We generally had breakfast half-past 5 and supper generally at about 1. In the month of March, 1911, we had supper at 6 o’clock. The way this trouble started on the 10th of March, 1911, this Jack Hulet was milking — he is the man who*210 is now in jail being held as a witness in the case of the State of North Dakota against McLain Cooper, — he was doing the milking, and we had a cow that nobody conld milk; I couldn’t milk her, and he told McLain that he couldn’t. Just before dinner, McLain come to me and asked me if I could send that cow down to the Sutton farm. I told him, after dinner; and so he come around after dinner, and he says, ‘You don’t need to take the cow down.’ He said the kid would milk her. The kid is George, that is the only name he went by there. I understood he was a cousin of the Coopers, but I couldn’t say. And so when they started to milk, he couldn’t do anything, and he couldn’t get no milk from her, and McLain was helping him and they couldn’t do anything, and they was mad, jumping around there; but didn’t say anything, and that is where you might say, the row started from. So, when I asked him at 7 o’clock if he wasn’t going to supper, he said he would go when he damn pleased. My wife was around the house sick and she didn’t feel like keeping meals all night, so he said he would get supper when he damned please, and he started toward the door and I started toward him. He looked pretty mad and we clinched right at the door. We laid down on the ice a little bit, and I told him, ‘If you want to get up and he a man and go in and get your supper, I will let you up,’ and finally he says, ‘All right.’ While I had him down, he called this George, the kid, to go down and call the sheriff, and I told the kid to keep away from that telephone. So, after this row, him and the kid, they hitched up to drive down, and I won’t say whether they both went down to the Sutton farm or not, but they hitched up the team and drove around the corner of the barn, and that is the last that I see them. This was in the evening. It was about 7 o’clock when our trouble came up, and it was about half-past 7 or a quarter to eight when they got started to go to the Sutton farm. When we had this trouble John Hulet come along, and he says, ‘Let up, Drank;’ I says, ‘I ain’t hurting him,’ I says, ‘Any time he wants to get up and behave, I will let him up.’ McLain Cooper didn’t call for help while we had this trouble, and he didn’t call Jack Hulet to come over'there. We was working, the two of us, Jack Hulet and I, right close to his sheep shed. He was chopping ice away from the well, pretty close to the water trough. We had so much trouble with the water backing up higher than the water trough, and we finally got the water started under*211 neath, and we nsed to go out evenings to finish this water and was chopping the ice so the water could get away. There was an artesian well there on the place, and that was the cause of our trouble and lots of it. During the trouble with McLain I didn’t strike him. I choked him a little, but it never made a mark on him. I didn’t have any weapons with me at the time. I didn’t make any threats against him at that time, not a thing, and I didn’t injure him. I have the prettiest chance in the world if I wanted to, but I didn’t want to. I had never made any threats against McLain Cooper during the time that I was there, and I had had no trouble with him up to this time. He had never asked me to leave the farm. I didn’t see him again that night after he went to the Sutton farm. All that I did to him was to put him down on the ground and hold him there. He didn’t get a scratch. I must have throwed him. We met right at the door, and he was making for me, and I for him, and I catched him. It was all ice and water, and it wasn’t much of a trick to throw anyone there, it was so slippery there. There was a fence run west from the sheep-shed door, where we met; it was right up close, there is a gate comes right up to the building, and I think that gate was open all winter. I didn’t throw him over the fence, and didn’t injure him a bit; there wasn’t a scratch on him; I don’t think there was a scratch on me. I next saw McLain Cooper, after this scrap, about 7 o’clock or 7:15 the next morning. We had breakfast at 7 o’clock, and we went out to the barn. I went back in the barn and got a pail of feed for the pigs, and when I come to the door, the barn door, I met the gun. McLain Cooper, the son of Harry J. Cooper, held that gun. He says, H am going to shoot you.’ He threw the gun in my face and he said, ‘I am going to shoot you, Frank,’ I says, ‘Go ahead and shoot,’ — something like that, and I walked down a little further and I went into the other door and, getting down to this door, he shot at me twice — that is the sheep-shed door — he shot at me twice; when I got down in the sheep shed he shot again. When he fired the third shot I was inside. Nobody said anything during the time that he was firing. The first two shots my back was to him, and when I got to the shed I wouldn’t say. None of these shots hit me. The first two struck the barn, I couldn’t swear to that. The only thing — there is witnesses that saw the bullet holes in the building, but I couldn’t say for I never got back to the barn. I*212 think when the third shot was fired I was emptying the feed out. Up to this time he never said a word. The only remark I heard was, ‘I am -going to shoot you’ — that was the first thing. Then John Hulet hitched up the team and he was just going around the corner of the barn, and I got back there, and I says, Tut your team in the barn, Jack. It is getting too hot here for me.’ ‘Well,’ Jack says ‘Throw up your hands — why don’t you throw up your hands and find out what he wants.’ So I did; I throwed up my hands, and I says ‘What do you want?’ He says, ‘I want you to leave the place.’ That is, McLain Cooper said that. I said ‘I will get my coat and go.’ I didn’t make any threats against him at that time. I never made any threats against McLain Cooper. I never used any weapon on him; I never had any trouble with him other than the trouble I have just referred to. During this time my wife was in the house and she wanted to go to town that day, so when I started to the house to get my coat, I got about half way to the house and there is where he shot me, and she come around, she had to come around the. old bunk house to see where we were at the barn, you know, and she was going to find out about the team, and when she come around and looked up there, McLain was standing there looking at me with the gun in his hand; I was lying down then and he had shot me. That morning McLain Cooper and I and my wife and John Hulet, the witness who is now in jail, and my ten-year old step-daughter and my boy about six years old, were on the farm that morning. George wasn’t there that morning. "When that last shot was fired, I was going to the house after my coat — from the barn to the house — -I was about half way. McLain Cooper come along behind, and he was walking up on a kind of a ridge, and I got about half way to the house when he shot. He had the gun in his hand during all this time, every time I see him he had that gun in his hand. I didn’t see him shortly before he fired the last shot. I started for the house for my coat, and I got down quite a ways before he caught up with me, and I didn’t expect him to shoot or anything, and I wasn’t looking. Just as soon as he shot he walked around me, and he says, ‘I have plenty more — -I have got plenty more;’ that is all he said. He fired four shots that morning, to my knowledge, and it was the fourth shot that dropped me. When I started for the house, John Hulet was putting the team in the barn. He had a team hitched up and he was*213 putting them in the barn. The barn is, I should judge, about 75 yards from the house; it might be a little bit the other way. The barn is north and a little bit west from the house. I don’t think McLain Cooper remained on the farm over five or ten minutes after he had shot me; until he got his team. I didn’t hear him say anything after the shooting except what I have told, and I told him to tell Hulet to help me in the house, and I heard him say to Hulet, ‘There is a fellow down there wants you to help him in the house.’ Just after the shooting my wife come out, and she see him with the gun and she hollered to me, ‘Are you shot, Trank ?’ and I says, ‘Yes,’ and I says, ‘Phone for a doctor.’ I didn’t see whether McLain Cooper had the gun in his hand when I told him to tell John Hulet to help me in the house; he had the gun with him, he had no place to put it. We had no trouble that morning outside of this shooting, — not a word,' — and he never asked me to leave the farm until that morning, and there never was word in the world about settlement. When Harry J. Cooper left thé farm he didn’t give me any instructions as to the running of the farm. He just called me up by phone and he told me, ‘Hello,’ he says, ‘I wanted to come out to see you, but I couldn’t get out,’ he says, ‘I am going to take the evening train. Nothing was said between us as to McLain Cooper at that time. I was in charge of the farm. I was hired by the year to take charge of the farm in the summer and help to take care of the stock in the winter. Hulet had worked for Cooper not quite a month. He worked on the Sutton farm about three weeks, and they brought him from the Sutton farm. I was conscious shortly after I was shot, — I was always conscious and I remember everything as well as I am sitting here. Hulet didn’t interfere when we had this scrap on the evening of the 10th; he just talked to us. McLain promised to be good and get his supper that night, and then I let him up immediately. There was nothing further said or done after we got up; there was no further trouble until I was shot. After this scrap McLain Cooper got up and went in the sheep shed for a few minutes, and he walked down to the house and stepped inside the door and walked out. The two of them started toward the Sutton farm that night; I couldn’t say whether they ever got there or not. There was only one telephone in the house at that time. Jack and I was both in the house when he-come in, and he didn’t use the telephone after the trouble. The tele*214 phone was located on the west side of the house, about the center of the room. When he fired the shot that struck me and dropped me to the ground he was walking behind me and a little hit to the left side. I was walking toward the house and he come up behind me; only a little bit on the left side. I don’t think he was over ten feet away from me when he shot. He didn’t say anything when he fired that shot; never said a word when he was walking behind me. I was going to the house to get my coat and leave the farm. I was going to take my coat and leave word for my wife to pack up and I would help move after the trouble was over. My coat was in the house. John Hulet didn’t have any weapon that morning. Nobody else on the farm had any weapon that morning, or at .any time that I know of. When Hulet was told he come and dragged me down to the house. The doctor was called, — Doctor Anderson. I told my wife to call him, and she did and he came. I couldn’t say how long after the shooting he was there. He carried me in and laid me down on the cot, I couldn’t say the length of time, for I was in terrible pain, and he took me a mile in a single buggy, and we had to stop and change with a farmer, and I was taken into the hospital and have remained here ever since. I couldn’t say what kind of a gun McLain Cooper used; it looked like a Smith & Wesson; it was a nickel plated gun. I would say it was a 32 or 38; they look larger than they really are. After the shooting McLain Cooper took the team and went to the Sutton farm; I think George was down there. I have seen McLain since the shooting. It was when they changed me to a double rig and he was with the sheriff, with Osmon, and the deputy got out and come over to help change me. I made no threats against McLain Cooper when I went to the house from the barn that morning; there wasn’t a word spoken. I didn’t intend to get any weapon; I intended to get my coat and get out of there and leave, and that is all I intended to do. I never had any trouble in particular with any of the men. We used to have little chewing matches with some of them, but you know how it is with a big crew of men. I sent a few of them down the line for the money. That is as much trouble as I ever had there, which Mr. Cooper always upheld; that is, Harry J. Cooper. I never had any trouble with McLain Cooper about the men. I heard the gun report when I dropped, at least that is what I thought I heard, you know. McLain Cooper was right behind*215 me and then he walked right around me. I went with my head that way and he walked right around me, and he says, ‘I got plenty more.’ He had the gun in his hand and he is the one that shot me.
“The foregoing statement, consisting of seven typewritten pages and .six lines on the eighth page, is my dying declaration, in my own words, and is a true and correct statement of the facts concerning the matter referred to therein. The same has just been read to me, and I now .solemnly say and declare that the same is true and correct, believing that I am dying. My doctor and the nurses have just told me that I must now die, and I fully realize that death is near when I make this ■solemn declaration of facts, and I now sign my name hereto in. the presence of these witnesses who have also subscribed their names hereto •as witnesses this 29th day of June, a. d. 1911.”
The testimony of Dr. Anderson, B. O. Boyd, and William C. Green shows conclusively that the dying declaration of James Branklin Ross was made under the conviction on his part that his death was unavoidable and near at hand. Special emphasis may be drawn to that portion ■of the declaration which deals with his firm conviction that his death was inevitable and near at hand, and every inference seemed to be at hand to induce the telling' of the truth. The words specially emphasized are as follows: “The foregoing statement, consisting of seven typewritten pages and six lines on the eighth page, is my dying declaration, in my own words, and is a true and correct statement of the facts ■concerning the matter referred to therein. The same has just been read to me, and I now solemnly say and declare that the same is true and correct, believing that I am dying. My doctor and the nurses have just told me that I must now die, and I fully realize that death is near when I make this solemn declaration of facts, and I now sign my name Bereto in the presence of these witnesses, who have also subscribed their names hereto as witnesses this 29th day of June, a. d. 1911.”
We are firmly convinced that such testimony is of the highest character. The solemnity of the occasion, the fact that all earthly hopes .and desires were about to disappear, no reason for deception, every reason for telling the truth, the end of all time for the declarant ebbing ■away, all eternity steadily and rapidly approaching, are significant reasons for giving credit to such testimony. What more binding force
To this point the discussion has largely been confined to the admission of dying declarations in criminal cases. It is said that dying declarations are in the nature of hearsay evidence, and for that reason are not admissible, but in criminal cases an important exception has been made on the ground of public policy. If the rule, however, be founded in reason and justice, it should be applicable in any case where a valuable right is involved, whether that right be a personal right or a property right. If, as in the trial of a case of homicide, where the person accused of a crime has at stake at such trial possibly his life, or where he may lose his liberty by being confined in the penitentiary for the term of his natural life, the dying declarations of his victim are admissible as evidence against the accused’s right to life or liberty as the case may be. It would seem by analogy that dying declarations would be admissible in support of a right less valuable than life or liberty, that is, a property right; and where such dying declaration is admitted for the purpose of proving the homicide, connecting the accused with its commission, it would seem it should be admissible to prove a property right which may have had its origin out of the homicide and facts connected therewith. Wig-more on Evidence, § 1436, says: “We are confronted with a restrictive rule of evidence commend
The learned trial court, after a careful consideration of the law, held that the dying declaration in this case was admissible, and the same was
Dying declarations may be made to anyone competent as a witness to testify to the transaction of the person accused. They may be made to the prosecuting attorney, and, if so, he is a competent witness, or it may be made to various persons, and not necessarily to iust one. 4 Ene. Ev. 982.
Dying declarations are not inadmissible in evidence because they are made in answer to questions which were propounded to the declarant. 4 Ene. Ev. 983. Declarations may be reduced to writing by the .declarant or someone for him, and such declarations are admissible in evidence. 4 Ene. Ev. 984. It has also been held that reading is not a necessary prerequisite to its admissibility in evidence. It is ■sufficient if the declarant retains his reasoning faculties and affirms the correctness of the statements made after he has given up all hope ■of recovery. Reg. v. Steele, 12 Cox, C. C. 168; People v. Gray, 61 Cal. 164, 44 Am. Rep. 549; People v. Hodgdon, 55 Cal. 72, 36 Am. Rep. 30; Mockabee v. Com. 78 Ky. 380; Young v. Com. 6 Bush, 312; State v. McEvoy, 9 S. C. 208; Snell v. State, 29 Tex. App. 236, 25 Am. St. Rep. 723, 15 S. W. 722.
The former opinion of this court handed down at the December, 1916, term, the writer of this opinion believes is not based upon sound principles of law applicable to this case, and, in addition to that, is based upon a misconception of the true relations existing between all the parties, and before a true conception of the legal principles which •apply to this case can be had, the definite relationship, duty, or authority of James Pranklin Ross, McLain Cooper, and Harry J. Cooper, must be ascertained. It is undisputed that James Pranklin Ross was in the employ of Harry J. Cooper as a servant, and as the testimony shows, to some extent at least, as the foreman for a large farm of Harry Cooper. The testimony also shows that McLain Cooper was engaged in rendering service to Harry J. Cooper upon said farm; that
The answer of the defendant in paragraph 1 admits all of the allegations contained in paragraph 6, so that for the purpose of managing, ■directing, and controlling all the matters of business of such farm and the conduct thereof, the powers and authority of the master Harry J. ■Cooper were for the time in question at least delegated to McLain Cooper, and in the exercise of such delegated powers and authority in
Jaggard on Torts, page 1043, says: “Positively one employee becomes vice principal of another only when he is intrusted with the performance of some absolute and personal duty of the master himself. These duties are not only absolute, but they are also inalienable and nonassignable. They may be devolved on others by the master, but. not without recourse to him. For negligence in the discharge of these-duties he is liable. It is immaterial whether such negligence is his own or that of his servant. In this sense the servant is alter ego of the master, or vice principal.” James Franklin Ross was a servant of Harry J. Cooper. If Harry J. Cooper was going to employ another servant to whom he would delegate his authority as master, who should govern, control, and direct the acts, and work of the servant James-Franklin Ross, it was the bounden and absolute duty of Harry J. Cooper, in selecting such servant to whom he delegated his powers as master, to know and to use that degree of care which an employer should take in employing and providing such servant to whose orders James Franklin Ross would be subject, and who would have the control and direction of the work James Franklin Ross was doing. The employer, the master, is not justified in subjecting his servant, James Franklin Ross, to injury from an incompetent, negligent, or otherwise unfit, servant. He is liable if he knew, or, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, could have known, of the unfitness, incompetency, or insufficiency from any reason, of the servant he employed to exercise the authority of master over other servants of the master. McLain Cooper was a. very young boy to intrust with the management, control, and direction of men a great deal older than himself, and was very young to assume the heavy responsibility delegated to him to perform by Harry J. Cooper. McLain Cooper was the son of Harry J. Cooper. Whatever weak
The plaintiff in this case, in the court below, recovered a judgment for $3,500. She is the wife of James Franklin Eoss. They had two children, — one of their own and one adopted. It was the duty under the law for James Franklin Eoss to support his wife, this plaintiff, and the two children. McLain Cooper, while exercising the powers and
Rehearing
On Second Petition for Rehearing.
See also — N. D. —. This case has been well and thoroughly argued by counsel and by the judges in conference. By a majority of the judges a decision was given in favor of the defendant, and a motion for rehearing was denied. Now a second petition for rehearing is filed on the same grounds as presented in the former petition, and on an affidavit in regard to the supposed disqualification of Justice Birdzell to sit as a judge in the case.
The affidavit shows that long prior to the time of the presentation of this case on rehearing, and under the supposition that the case would be disposed'of before Justice Birdzell would become a member of the court, on a train Chas. A. Lyche, attorney for defendant, had some conversation with Justice Birdzell, in which he intimated that he had a decided view on the law of the case, and expressed some doubts concerning his qualification to sit as a judge. Prior to the argument that question was submitted to the attorneys, and it was agreed that there was no objection to Judge Birdzell. There is no claim that he was related to either party, that he had ever been consulted or retained as counsel, or that he had any personal interest in the case. The' fact that he may have had a decided opinion concerning the law was no disqualification. Doubtless Justice Robinson had a more decided opinion concerning the law and the facts of the case, and it was shown by his strenuous dissent.
The case involved mixed questions of law and fact on which judges might well differ. It is proper and right that every judge should know the law and have a decided opinion concerning the law of every case,