226 P. 443 | Or. | 1924
Much of appellant’s brief is taken up with a discussion and comparison of the evidence in this case, and it must be said that the evidence is somewhat conflicting, but perhaps the discrepancies may be referred to the fact that nearly two years had elapsed between the happening of the accident and the date of the trial. We are not permitted to enter into a discussion as to the weight of evidence where there is any substantial evidence to justify the verdict. In this case, the plaintiff having prevailed, and the jury having seen fit to accept the testimony adduced by her as the true condition, the law requires us to assume that the jury was correct in that judgment. Therefore, taking plaintiff’s testimony as true, as we must, it appears that some two months before the accident the defendant T. H. Moore employed the servant in question to act as porter, part of his duties being to carry baggage
The objections to the testimony are numerous, many of them on the technical ground that questions propounded to plaintiff’s witnesses were leading, which is so largely a matter of discretion of the court that we do not attach much importance to them on that ground.
In particular, the witness Miss Frazier, who was somewhere near the northeast comer of the curb on Oregon Street when the accident occurred, detailed at length the circumstances of the accident and was asked the following question, which was objected to as calling for a conclusion of the witness:
“I will ask you, Miss Frazier, if when you saw the automobile first, and from the position where Mrs. Tyler had stepped off from the sidewalk, if there was plenty of space between the center post and Mrs. Tyler to have turned around her?”
This was objected to as calling for a conclusion of the witness, and the objection was overruled and the witness answered:
*506 “Well, the way he was coming, it seemed as though if he had gone straight he would have had plenty of room to have avoided her by going on the other side of her, between her and the center post.”
The question was directly leading, but was not objected to on that ground but on the ground that it called for a conclusion of the witness. It called partly for a conclusion and partly for a statement of fact, but all the testimony indicated that there was plenty of space for the driver to have kept to plaintiff’s left, even if she had been the full twelve feet from the curb. The street was admittedly fifty-two feet wide from curb to curb. Therefore, from the curb to the middle of the street would have been twenty-six feet, and allowing plaintiff to have been the extreme distance of twelve feet, the physical facts themselves indicate that there was a space of fourteen feet between the point she had reached in crossing the street to the center thereof — ample room for the driver to have kept to her left and avoided the accident. Even conceding, for the purposes of the argument, that the statement of the witness was more or less a conclusion, we fail to see how it could have been harmful.
Another objection was made to an inquiry put to T. H. Moore as to the nationality of the driver of the car. He was asked if he knew the name of the driver, and he answered that he did. He was then asked what nationality the driver was and, over objection, he answered, “Supposed to be a Korean.” He was then asked if he had any other Japanese or Korean driving the car for a period of a month or two preceding the accident, and he answered that he did not remember having any. The objection to these questions was that the statement of the nationality
Another objection is that Mrs. Hess, the mother of plaintiff, was placed upon the stand and asked this question, “Do you know of your own knowledge now whether she is able to perform regular household work?” The answer was, “She is not.” The question was asked after it had been shown by the witness’ testimony that she had waited upon her daughter during her injury. We do not think this was purely a conclusion of the witness, but a statement of a fact. The answer was not responsive to the question and could have been stricken out on that ground, but no such motion was made. It was a question which should have been answered by “Yes” or “No.” There is little dispute in fact as to the seriousness of plaintiff’s injuries.
“State whether or not in your judgment it was possible after the time she stepped off of the curbing for the driver of that car to have avoided that accident?”
It was objected to, among other grounds, as leading, suggestive and calling for a conclusion of the witness, and the objection was sustained by the court on the last ground. The witness had stated all of the conditions before and his testimony would have been merely a conclusion drawn from these conditions and could have added nothing to the force of his testimony; and, besides this, it was asked him to determine the very fact that the jury was there to try, namely, whether it was possible for the defendant’s servant to have stopped the car and avoided the accident. Perhaps it would have been as well if the court had admitted it, but we do not think that the ruling to the contrary constitutes reversible error. It certainly would not have been reversible error if it had been admitted.
The most serious question in this case arises upon the testimony of Mr. T. H. Moore that two weeks before the accident he had told the porter not to use the car any longer, as his son needed it for use out at his orchard, and had furnished the servant with a hand-car to wheel the baggage in place of the automobile. It was admitted that for several weeks previous to this alleged direction the porter had used the car and, in fact, had been instructed to some extent in its use by the defendant. It does not appear that the car was taken away from him for any
“ * * The doctrine of respondeat superior is not limited to the acts of the servant done with the express or implied authority of the master, but extends to all acts of the servant done in discharge of the business intrusted to him, even though done in violation of his instructions. See authorities collected in 20 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.), 167.”
To the same effect, see: Houston v. Keats Auto Co., 85 Or. 125 (166 Pac. 531); Adams v. Wiesendanger, 27 Cal. App. 590 (150 Pac. 1016); Barrett v. Minn. St.
We have carefully examined the instructions objected to by counsel, as well as all of the instructions given in the case, and do not find any of them vulnerable to the objections urged, and, as applied to this case, they are approved. As the objections go to a very large number of the instructions, it is impracticable to discuss each one in detail, but on the whole, the case seems to have been fairly presented to the jury, and the verdict is not disproportionate to the injury shown to have been inflicted.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.