107 Neb. 262 | Neb. | 1921
Plaintiff brought this action for damages alleged to have been received while an employee of defendant Drake-Williams-Mount Company, a corporation. He also joined as a defendant one Otto Starr. The defendant Drake-Williams-Mount Company was engaged in the business of manufacturing tanks and boilers. Defendant Starr was the foreman at the plant at which plaintiff was employed. In the performance of his labors plaintiff took a position in one of the tanks under construction which, according to the view of the foreman, was disadvantageous. The foreman directed plaintiff to take a different position, which the foreman indicated. Plain
For the purpose of this revieAV, Ave give full credence to the testimony offered by plaintiff. Having done so, does it establish a liability against the employer? Plaintiff contends that the employer is liable for the acts of the foreman, who was in charge of the plant with power to hire and discharge employees. The employer denies that any direction or order to discipline employees had been given, and insists that, if the foreman attempted to do so, he Avas acting outside the scope of his authority and Avithout the sanction or approval of his employer. Plaintiff also undertook to prove that the foreman Avas a man of quarrelsome disposition, and that this fact was known to the employer. The evidence offered, however, is entirely insufficient to prove the foreman either quarrelsome or vicious. Indeed, the testimony of plainitff’s Avitnesses on this point affirmatively shoAVS otherwise.
Was the act of the foreman in making the assault within the scope of his employment or so connected Avith
The foreman had authority to direct the actions of the employees in and about the performance of their work and to discharge them either with or without explanation. As the representative of the employer, he had, of course, the right to maintain order and preserve discipline, but this did not carry with it the right to inflict corporal punishment. It is true that employees, such as railway guards and street car conductors, as a necessary part of their employment, are called upon to use force under special circumstances in preserving the peace and good order and in removing from the premises, or cars, of the employer undesirable and dangerous characters, and, in certain instances, the employer may be liable for the misconduct of the employee. But no such duty devolved upon the foreman in this instance. Indeed, the facts presented bring the case clearly within the rule announced by this court in Allertz v. Hankins, 102 Neb. 202. No doubt the trial court had that holding in view when he made the order from which this appeal is prosecuted. The record is free from error, and the judgment is
Affirmed.