Allison v. Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc.

1960 OK 48, 350 P.2d 287, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 300
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 1, 1960
Docket38610
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1960 OK 48 (Allison v. Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., 1960 OK 48, 350 P.2d 287, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 300 (Okla. 1960).

Opinion

HALLEY, Justice.

This action was filed in the District Court of Oklahoma County by Roy E. Allison against Kenneth C. King and Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., to recover compensatory and punitive damages.

Plaintiff alleged that Kenneth C. King committed an assault and battery upon him, causing serious injuries to his jaws, head and teeth, while King was the agent, servant and employee of defendant Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., and acting within the scope of his agency and employment.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., demurred to such evidence, which the court sustained. Kenneth C. King introduced his evidence and rested; and the plaintiff dismissed his action without.'prejudice as against defend-ánt, King. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and in the order the court stated that the court had sustained the demurrer to the evidence of plaintiff upon the ground that the evidence of plaintiff and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom was not sufficient to show that King was acting as the agent, servant, or employee of defendant Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., or that King was acting within the scope of any employment or agency of that defendant at the time plaintiff was struck and injured by King.

We shall refer to the parties as they appeared in the trial court, or by name. The plaintiff submits as its only proposition that:

“The trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence of defendant Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc.”

The plaintiff did not dismiss without prejudice as to defendant Kenneth C. King until he had testified for himself and also had called J. R. Brown as a witness. The court stated in his order overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial the grounds upon which he sustained the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and stated in substance that the evidence was not sufficient to show that Kenneth C. King was acting as agent, servant or employee of Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., or that he was acting within the scope of any employment or agency for that concern at the time plaintiff was struck and injured by Kenneth C. King.

The plaintiff alleged in his amended petition that King was acting as the agent, servant and employee of Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., and was acting within the scope of his agency and employment. The answer of the present defendant was verified and admitted the employment of King, but specifically denied that he was acting with authority or permission or engaged in the scope of his employment at the time and place of the alleged assault alleged in the petition of plaintiff.

'Plaintiff states that the testimony material to the issue of agency is found in the *289 testimony of Francis Fleming, Kenneth C. King and the plaintiff himself.

Mr. Fleming testified that at the time of the incident involved, he was the executive secretary of the Oklahoma Gasoline Retailers Association and that the plaintiff Roy Allison was president of that organization. Roy Allison testified that at the direction of the Association he and Fleming were making a check of various locations to test the temperature of gasoline to determine if gasoline was being lost due to differential between the temperature of gasoline in delivery trucks and the temperature of the underground tanks.

Plaintiff and Fleming had checked the temperature of gasoline at Harry Smith Station in Oklahoma City and intended to make an extensive investigation in Oklahoma City and over the State for the- dealers at service stations. They were en route to check at the Jess Scruggs Conoco Station about a block from the Village. They noticed a gasoline transport truck, owned by Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., which was being driven by Kenneth C. King, unloading gasoline into underground tanks at Lonnie Eggleston’s Service Station. Plaintiff decided to check the temperature of the gasoline in the truck and in the ground tanks to get the temperature above and below the ground at the same time.

Plaintiff did not see the truck driver, King, but talked to Mr. Eggleston and got his permission to check the temperature of the gasoline before it went into the ground tanks and was given such permission from Mr. Eggleston. Plaintiff then went to the rear of the truck and up a catwalk and forward to the front compartment of the truck where he unrolled the cord of a gauge and dropped the gauge into the gasoline. While plaintiff was making this check Kenneth C. King approached the truck. Francis Fleming was standing on the ground at the rear of the truck. He said that Kenneth King used some very foul and abusive language to Mr. Allison and ordered him down off the truck.

He testified that King then went up onto the top of the truck, grabbed plaintiff by the arm and threatened to knock him off the truck; that King stated “you know what the trouble is” and “this gauge is going to get you into trouble.” Plaintiff further testified that King grabbed his arm and picked him up from one side of the catwalk and put him on the other and plaintiff went to the back of the truck and started down, and King shoved him down the ladder, and King was still using profane language and Fleming reached out to get the temperature gauge, and King hit the plaintiff from behind in both jaws and in the ribs.

The evidence shows that King was in the general employment of Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., as a truck driver and on the date of the incident above described was driving a truck owned by his employer and making a delivery of gasoline to the station of Lonnie Eggleston. It was this gasoline that plaintiff was testing.

King testified that he was responsible for the gasoline and that after he got it in the tank it belonged to Phillips Petroleum Company, and that Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., probably did not know that he was at this particular station at this time, because he received his orders from the dispatcher of Phillips Petroleum Company; that his employer had employed him to haul gasoline products wherever Phillips directed.

On cross-examination the plaintiff testified that he had complained to King that he had been losing gasoline on account of temperature, and that there is vapor coming from the dome plates on top of the truck when they are open, and that there is always a little hazard of fire.

Plaintiff also testified that he did not secure the permission of King to climb upon the truck, and that he did not call the office of the owner of the truck “that day” and ask their permission to climb upon the truck.

Kenneth C. King also testified that while he was employed by Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk, Inc., but that “at the time of this *290 fight I wa§ working for myself.” The attorney for plaintiff asked the witness, King, the following questions and the answers were as follows:

“Q. State to the jury whether you were employed by Gilmore, Gardner & Kirk to deliver gasoline to this particular station, Lonnie Eggleston’s station ?
“A. I drive a truck for them. They probably didn’t even know that I was going to this particular station, either Gilmore, Gardner or Kirk, because the orders that I received at that time came from Phillips’ dispatcher, Ray McCullough.

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Bluebook (online)
1960 OK 48, 350 P.2d 287, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-v-gilmore-gardner-kirk-inc-okla-1960.