10 Mo. App. 197 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for damages for injuries to the plaintiff,
So far as the defendant is personally concerned, his conduct in the matter is entirely blameless ; he acted very generously in donating horses, carriages, and drivers for the object named ; and if he shall be compelled to pay damages for the very grievous injury which happened to Mrs. Siegrist, it will be in obedience to a rule of law which is founded in the soundest considerations of public policy, and which the courts are not at liberty to relax — the rule which, in the dealings of every man with the general public, identifies him with his servant or agent, when the latter is acting within the scope of his employment or agency, and makes him responsible for the negligent injuries done by the latter,
The learned judge who sat in the trial of this case, did right in submitting it to the jury; but it seems to us that he put it to them on mistaken views of law, for which we feel constrained to reverse the judgment and remand the cause for another trial. We shall notice the instructions given and refused somewhat in detail, as the case must go back for a new trial.
Let us test, by the foregoing propositions, the instructions which were given and refused. The plaintiff offered the following, all of which were refused : —
1. “If the jury believe from the evidence that Mrs. Siegrist attended the performance at Mercantile Library Hall, assisting her daughter in dressing for said performance, and that, at the close of the same, she came down to the door and in good faith entered the defendant’s carriage along with certain performers, without objection from the defendant or his driver, under the impression and belief that she had a right to ride along with said performers, and neither the defendant nor his driver, nor any one for them, gave her notice that said carriage was intended only for the actual performers, then the obligation of the defendant to carry her safely attached, and the defendant is liable, under the law, for the negligence of his driver in the performance of that duty.
2. “ If the jury believe from the evidence that the carriage belonged to defendant and was driven by his driver,
“ The jury is instructed that the assent or permission of defendant for plaintiff to enter and ride in his carriage, need not necessarily be an express assent or permission, but that it may be contained in the acts and silent acquiescence of the defendant or his agents.
^4. “ If the jury find from the evidence that Mrs. Siegrist, with the knowledge of defendant or his driver, was received into defendant’s carriage, to be taken to her residence, without objection, then this is evidence tending to prove that Mrs. Siegrist had the defendant’s assent to use and ride in his carriage.
5. “If the carriage and horses belonged to defendant, and the driver was in the pay of defendant, and not in the pay or under the control of anyone else, then the driver was the servant of defendant, and the defendant is answerable for all negligence committed by him within the scope or course of his driving.
“If the jury believe from the evidence that defendant furnished his carriage and driver for the benefit of performers at the entertainment given in the Mercantile Library Hall, and that Mrs. Siegrist came out of said hall and was invited to a seat in the defendant’s carriage by the same person who was authorized to seat the performers in said carriage, and who did seat the other occupants in said car
*7. “If the jury believe from the evidence that'the defendant intrusted a list or memorandum to his driver for the purpose of instructing him as to the persons he was to admit into his carriage, and that said driver, in violation of said instruction, admitted Mrs. Siegrist into said carriage, and did not notify her, at the time of so admitting her, of any list or instructions to the contrary, and she was admitted without knowledge on her part, of said list or instructions, entered in good faith, believing that it was with the assent of the owner of said carriage, then she was not a trespasser, but was lawfully in said carriage.
s~8. “If the jury believe from the evidence that Mrs. Siegrist was received into defendant’s carriage as indicated in instructions numbered 1 or 2 for the plaintiff, to be conveyed from the Mercantile Library Hall to her residence, and that by reason of the incompetency of defendant’s driver, proceeding from drunkenness, the horses ran away with said carriage, and while so running away Mrs. Siegrist fell or was thrown from said carriage, and was by said fall injured, without negligence of her own contributing immediately thereto, and said incompetency of said driver was known to defendant, or could have been known by the exercise of ordinary diligence, then they must find for the plaintiff.
/" 9. “The jury are instructed that a carrier of persons, whether a private or common carrier, is bound to carry safely and carefully any person received for carriage. This is a public duty, and is not chauged by the fact that no fare or pecuniary consideration was to be paid by the person carried.
^ 10. “If the jury believe from the evidence that Mrs. Siegrist was received into defendant’s carriage as indicated in instructions numbered 1 or 2 for the plaintiffs, to be conveyed from the Mercantile Library Hall to her residence, and that by reason of the incomptency of defendant’s driver, proceeding from drunkenness, the horses ran away with said
We should not reverse the judgment for the refusal to give the first two of these instructions, for the reason that the concluding words of each are so framed that they might possibly mislead the jury into the belief that the court considered the fact of negligence on the part of the driver established. In instructing a jury it is error for the judge to assume as proved a fact which the evidence leaves in dispute or doubt; nor should he so frame an instruction as that the jury may fall into the error of inferring that e wishes them to consider such a fact as proved. There are many cases deciding this in various ways. Peck v. Ritchy, 66 Mo. 114; Thompson v. Botts, 8 Mo. 710; Chouquette v. Barada, 28 Mo. 491; Merritt v. Given, 34 Mo. 98; Moffatt v. Conklin, 35 Mo. 453. With the qualifying words, “ if the jury find that the driver was guilty of negligence,” or other such words, these instructions would not be subject to criticism. The third, fourth, sixth, and seventh instructions were apt and proper under the evidence in the case. The fifth laid down to the jury the correct test by which to determine whether the driver was acting at the time as the servant of the defendant or not. Fink v. Furnace Co., ante, p. 61. The eighth and tenth could not certainly be objected to by the defendant. The ninth was a correct statement of the law embraced in tKe second proposition of law above laid down. The plaintiff had a right to have all these instructions, except the first and second, given to the jury, unless the learned judge properly presented to them the law of the case in the instructions which he gave of his own motion, or at the request of the defendant. This, in our judgment, he did not do. He gave of his own motion the following: —
“ The jury are instructed that if they believe from the*207 evidence that the carriage was furnishsd gratuitously by the defendant, under an agreement with him that it was to be used only in the conveyance to and from the Library, of persons who were to perform in the tableaux mentioned in the evidence, and if they further believe that the plaintiff, Mrs. Siegrist, was not one of such performers, and that she entered said carriage without the knowledge or consent of the defendant, then the defendant is not liable for any injuries she may have sustained while being driven in said carriage, even though the driver of said vehicle had undertaken to drive her' to her home, unless the jury should further find that such injuries were occasioned by gross carelessness on the part of the defendant; and, in order to find the defendant liable on account of such carelessness, the jury must believe from the evidence that at the time of the accident the driver of said vehicle was so intoxicated as to be unfit to manage the team intrusted to him, and that this fact was known to the defendant, and not known to said plaintiff; or that the habits of said driver, either as to drunkenness or carelessness, were such as to render him an unsafe or unfit person to be placed in charge of a vehicle, and that such habits were known to the defendant at the time ; and, further, that the injuries received by said plaintiff were occasioned by the drunkenness or carelessness of said driver.”
This instruction was clearly erroneous. Under it the jury could not have done otherwise than find for the. defendant, for it made the gross carelessness of the defendant, not that of his servant, the test of liability. In the first place, there are no degrees of negligence known to the law where the subject of the bailment is a human life. Any negligence under such circumstances is culpable, and may well be deemed gross. Steamboat v. King, 16 How. (U. S.) 469. This will at once be seen if we attempt to apply the definition of gross negligence which has been given by our Supreme Court: “That omission of care which even the
Nor do we agree with the explanation in the latter part-of this instruction, of what would amount to gross negligence of the defendant under the facts in evidence. Under that explanation, if the jury could have found from the evidence that the driver got drunk between the time when he left his master’s sight (say at seven or eight o’clock) and the time when the entertainment broke up (say at eleven o’clock), and the master knew nothing of it, and the man was not -in the habit of getting drunk, the plaintiff could'not recover. This entirely ignores the doctrine of respondeat superior, as we understand it, and makes the test of liability the personal negligence of the defendant.
The learned judge then gave, at the request of the defendant, the following instructions : —
“ The court instructs the jury that if they find from all the evidence and circumstances in this case, that the team in question ran away., and caused the injury complained of, from any other cause than the drunkenness or incapacity of the driver, they will find for the defendant.
“ The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence and circumstances in this case, that Mrs. Siegrist jumped or got out of the carriage in question, and was injured in consequence of doing so, and that she would not have been injured if she had remained in the carriage, and that a person of ordinary prudence and care would have remained in said carriage at the time she so jumped or got out, then the plaintiff cannot recover in this case.”
The first of these instructions is obnoxious to a rule which has often been animadverted upon by the Supreme Court of this State. It is this, that the judge must not single out certain facts, leaving out of view other essential facts, and tell the jury that if they find such facts to be true they must find for one party or the other. Chappell v. Allen, 38 Mo. 213, 220; Raysdon v. Trumbo, 52 Mo. 574. There was evidence tending to show that, although the driver may have been both competent and sober, yet the accident may have resulted from his personal negligence; and the instruction left this evidence out of view, and excluded it from the case as effectually as though it had not been given. It was therefore erroneous.
The second of these last instructions did not correctly state and apply the sixth proposition of law above stated. What a person of ordinary prudence would have done is not,
Of course the learned counsel will not understand us as intimating any opinion as to whether or not this is, upon the facts, a case for the recovery of damages. It may well consist with the evidence that this was one of those unavoidable accidents which sometimes overtake the most skilful, careful, and sober driver and the most steady horses, on the best roads. Some trifling object, not seen by the driver himself, — a cat running across the street, or a paper rustling in the wind, — might have been sufficient to produce the accident in this case, without any negligence whatever on the part of the defendant or the driver. Where, as in this case, there is any substantial evidence entitling the plaintiff to go to a jury, these questions lie wholly outside of our province. We have nothing to do except to see that the case is put fairly to the jury under the applicatory principles of law, as we understand them,