231 F. 926 | 8th Cir. | 1916
Whitted, the plaintiff below, brought this suit against the telephone comps ny to recover damages sustained by him by reason of an assault and battery committed by one John Grogan,
The evidence tended to show that the defendant telephone company maintains a public office in the depot of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, at Arkadelphia, Ark., for sending and receiving telephonic messages, the use of which was offered to the public for a consideration to be paid therefor; that the plaintiff, Whit-ted, having occasion to converse with a patron, entered one of the booths provided for that purpose, and called the operator at central station to secure the necessary connection. Some delay ensued, and plaintiff being then intoxicated, began abusing and cursing the operator, kicking the sides of the booth, beating the receiver against the telephone box, and otherwise creating disturbance. At this juncture John Grogan, the general manager of the defendant company, appeared upon the scene and ordered the plaintiff to cease his disturbance and to behave properly if he desired to use the booth. This not having the desired effect, but promoting more profanity and ^disturbance, Grogan forcibly ejected plaintiff from the booth, telling' him he. wanted no trouble with him; that all he wanted was that he should behave himself properly when transacting business there. He told plaintiff, if he would go away awhile and come back again, he would probably be able to get his party. This conversation occupied but little time, one witness putting it at 20 or 30 seconds. Hot words passed, and threatening attitude was taken by Whitted, and Grogan fearing for his personal safety, drew back and hit plaintiff a hard blow in the face with his fist.
A careful and attentive reading of all the proof satisfies us that there was substantial evidence arising, not only from the facts proven, but from the reasonable inferences deducible from them, to the effect that the second assault was a mere continuation of the first, and committed by Grogan for the purpose of preventing a continuance of the disturbance by plaintiff—enough, at least, to justify a submission of the issue to the jury whether or not the assault was committed in the interest of the defendant and within the scope of Grogan’s employment, or whether it was a mere personal quarrel having no relation to the duty of Grogan to his master. A case involving facts quite similar to those in the present case (Pennsylvania Mining Co. v. Jarnigan, 222 Fed. 889, 138 C. C. A. 369) was recently before us. In it we held that the question whether the assault was personal, or representative of the master, was for the jury; so in this case we think the District Court should have submitted the issue presented to the'jury under appropriate instructions.
The judgment must therefore be reversed, and caqse remanded, with directions to grant a new trial.