158 N.W. 988 | N.D. | 1916
The complaint in effect alleges, that plaintiff, while ■crossing one of the streets in the city of Grand Dorks, was run over and injured by an automobile owned by defendant M. Rasmussen while being driven by his servant and codefendant, Minnie Rasmussen; that the accident was caused by the careless and negligent manner in which .such automobile was being driven.
Each of the defendants separately demurred to the complaint, which ■demurrer was overruled, and each have appealed. It is stipulated that the decision of one appeal will control the other. It is conceded that the sole question for decision is whether the causes of action against the defendants are properly joined. Appellants contend that there is an improper joinder of causes of action for the reason that the liability of the servant, if any, is based upon her personal negligence, while that •of the master is predicated upon the theory that the negligence of the servant is imputed to him. In other words it is asserted that he can be held only upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, for the alleged reason that he was not present in the car at the time of the accident. Such ■contention, however, has no proper basis in the record, for the complaint in paragraph 1 thereof distinctly alleges: “That . . . the ■auto . . . was operated by ... Minnie Rasmussen at all the times mentioned . . for and on the business of the defendant, M. Rasmussen, and with his knowledge, consent, and under his ■direction.” Such allegations for the purposes of this appeal must be accepted as true. It follows, therefore, that the defendants are jointly guilty of the acts of negligence complained of, and this being true they ■can be proceeded against jointly under all the authorities. This alone would necessitate an affirmance of the orders, but we wish to place our •decision on the broader ground that, even if the complaint had disclosed ■that the master was not present at the time 'of the accident, and the automobile was not being driven under his direction, still both were proper
“We have no statute in this state fixing any rule upon the subject of the joinder of parties defendant in actions in tort. Section 4062, Eev. Laws 1905, refers only to actions upon contract. We must therefoi-e refer to the rules of the common law controlling the question in determining whether the action at bar was properly brought against all the defendants. An examination of the books discloses an irreconcilable conflict in the decisions upon the question. It is held by some courts that separate persons, acting independently, but causing together a single injury, are joint tort feasors, and may be sued either jointly or severally at the election of the plaintiff, and that it is not essential that the defendants in such case shall have acted in concert. Matthews v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co. 56 N. J. L. 34, 22 L.R.A. 261, 27 Atl. 919, 12 Am. Neg. Rep. 285, 15 Enc. PL & Pr. 559. Other courts uphold the converse of the proposition, maintaining the rule that joint or concerted action on the part of all the defendants is essential to the right of joinder in the same suit. Parsons v. Winchell, 5 Cush. 592, 52 Am. Dec. 745. The case of Trowbridge v. Forepaugh, 14 Minn. 133, Gil. 100, may be said to support this view.
“We do not feel called upon, however, to analyze the eases on this subject for the purpose of evolving a rule applicable to tort actions in
“No substantial reason can be given for requiring separate actions in such cases. On the contrary, the orderly administration of justice will be conserved by permitting the joinder. Both parties are liable for the consequences of the negligent acts of the servant, and one action and one recovery will terminate the litigation and avoid the necessity of separate trials of the same issue. So long as the liability of each defendant is identical, upon the same state of facts, it is of no material consequence that the liability of one arises at common law and that of the other under the statutes imposing liability upon the master for the negligence of his servants.
“One of the principal reasons assigned by those courts which hold such a joinder improper is that the right of contribution is lost and cannot be resorted to by one against the other codefendant. This reason, as applied to cases of this kind, is unsound. There is, it is true, a general rule that the right of contribution does not exist as between joint tort feasors; but it applies only between persons who by concert of action intentionally commit the wrong complained of. Where there is no concert of action in the commission of the wrong, the rule does not apply. In such cases the parties are not in pari delicto as to each other, and as between themselves their rights may be adjusted in accordance with the principles of law applicable to the relation in fact existing
“It would seem, also, that § 4154, Rev. Laws 1905, disposes of the question adversely to appellant’s contention, considered from the standpoint of separate causes of action, and not mere joinder of parties defendant. That statute provides that two or more causes of action may be united in one pleading’ when they arise out of the same transaction or transactions, affect all the parties to the action, and do not require separate places of trial. This authorizes the joinder of separate causes of action when the conditions named in the statute exist, and it is not important that the defendants named are not all affected alike. If the several causes of action pleaded arise out of the same transaction, they may be joined in one suit, although the defendants named may be affected in different degrees of responsibility. That causes of action in tort are included within the meaning of this statute is quite obvious. The word Transaction,’ as there used, embraces something more than contractual relations. It includes any occurrences or affairs the result of which vests in a party the right to maintain an action, whether the occurrences be in the nature of tort or otherwise. Lamming v. Galusha, 135 N. Y. 239, 31 N. E. 1024; Scarborough v. Smith, 18 Kan. 399; King v. Coe Commission Co. 93 Minn. 52, 100 N. W. 667. The plaintiff’s right of action in the case at bar, as already observed, is for the death of her intestate, and is founded in the wrongful conduct of defendants in the operation of the company’s business in its switch yards at Minneapolis. What occurred there, either in committing wrongful acts or negligently failing to take such action or steps as would prevent the injury complained of, amounts to a transaction or transactions within the meaning of the statute, and the several acts concurring and resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate may properly be united in the same complaint.”
The author in 1 R. C. L. 363, states the rule as follows: “By virtue of statute in many, if not all, the so-called Code states, there may be a joinder in one complaint of two or more causes of action where they arise out of the same transaction, the word ‘transaction’ as used in such statutes meaning something which has taken place whereby a cause of action has arisen, and embracing not only contractual relations, but occurrences in the nature of tort as well. It is no objection to the joinder of causes of action that they concern separate primary rights, for, however numerous may be minor transactions, each constituting a primary right enforceable by the proper remedy, so long as they all reach back to the point of union as the parent cause thereof, they all arise out of one ‘transaction’ and may be vindicated together, regardless of the form of remedy requisite as to each, provided they affect all the parties, and do not require different places of trial.”
Mechem on Agency, after referring to the authorities holding to the contrary, says: “The weight of authority, however, is clearly the other way, and permits the principal and the agent to be joined in the same action at the option of the plaintiff.” § 2011.
One of the most lucid and sound statements of the rule which has come to our notice is made by Mr. Labatt in his treatise on Master and
“If the action is brought against the master and servant, all the courts agree that the joinder is proper where the liability is joint or concurrent, as where the master is guilty of actual negligence, as contradistinguished from imputed negligence under the doctrine of respondeat superior. So, in the case of trespass by the servant under the authority of the master, it is agreed that both may be joined, since both are in such a case deemed to be principals.
“The conflict in the decisions begins where the master does not participate in the negligent or wrongful act of the servant, his liability resting upon the doctrine of respondeat superior or upon statute. It has been held that the act complained of is for this reason not joint, and that the master and servant must therefore be pursued separately. The basis for this distinction is purely technical, and arose before the adoption of the reformed procedure. Under the old forms, the remedy against the master who did not command or participate in the wrong, but who, in the event of his servant’s negligence, had the fault imputed to him, would be an action in case, while the action against the servant would be in trespass; and these actions could not be joined. One reason which has also been urged against the nonjoinder of master and servant in this class of cases is that the judgment would be against them jointly as joint wrongdoers, and consequently that the master, if he alone should satisfy the execution, could not call on the servant for reimbursement or contribution. This point was emphasized in the leading case in Massachusetts on the subject, and has had considerable influence on the decisions. There is, however, no real difficulty in this situation, for the master’s right to contribution may be preserved, although the master and servant are sued together. Here, again, the objection to the joinder is technical.
The question whether the master and servant can be joined in an action to recover damages for the servant’s wrongdoing in which the master does not participate long troubled the Federal courts, where the point was raised in applications for removal on the ground of a separable controversy. If the action is joint,' the cause cannot, of course, be removed. The circuit court decisions were not in harmony on the question whether such actions are joint, or, in other words,
“The preponderance of authority in all jurisdictions is in favor of ■ the right to join master and servant so as to proceed against them in a single action, although the master’s liability is based on the. doctrine of respondeat superior, and not upon any personal nonfeasance or misfeasance. ...
“From a careful examination of the cases on the joinder of master and servant, it would seem that the better view is that in favor of allowing the single action where both are liable for the wrongful act of the servant, no matter on what theory or ground the master’s responsibility may be placed, since this rule does away with a multiplicity of suits. The judgment in an action where the master does not participate in the wrong may be considered as joint and several, so as to preserve the master’s right to an action against the servant in reimbursement; and this would appear to be especially true under the modern forms of procedure, abolishing the distinctions between the ancient technical forms of pleading.”
Being in full accord with the views above quoted, and for the reasons above stated, we have no hesitancy in affirming the orders appealed from, and it is so ordered.