Barell Food Stores, Inc. v. Bennett

1944 OK 78, 153 P.2d 106, 194 Okla. 508, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 518
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 15, 1944
DocketNo. 30962.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1944 OK 78 (Barell Food Stores, Inc. v. Bennett) 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
Barell Food Stores, Inc. v. Bennett, 1944 OK 78, 153 P.2d 106, 194 Okla. 508, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 518 (Okla. 1944).

Opinions

DAVISON, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries. Joan Bennett, a minor, through her father as next friend, is the plaintiff. Barrall Food Stores, Incorporated, a corporation engaged in the retail grocery business in the city of Sapulpa is the sole defendant.

Harry Pantry was, at the time plaintiff was injured, an employee of the defendant company. He delivered groceries for it. His alleged gross-negligence and wanton disregard of plaintiff’s safety while plaintiff was, at his invitation, riding on the running board of his delivery truck constitutes the basis of this action.

The trial of the cause to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $5,000.

The defendant appeals to this court complaining of the alleged failure of the trial court to discharge its duty to instruct on all of the issues; of the failure of the trial court to sustain its challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence and of the action of the trial court in permitting an amendment of the plaintiff’s pleadings during the trial, which amendment broadened the field of proof.

A review of the proof as reflected by the record discloses the following situation:

In connection with its retail grocery business the defendant employed Harry Pantry to drive its delivery truck and to make deliveries in the city of Sa-pulpa and its environs. He was thus engaged on October 1, 1940.

*510 Just preceding the occurrence which gave rise to this action, he had made a delivery at 219 South Elm Street. His next delivery was at 1021 North Main street. A proper route between the two points led within one-half block of his home. He chose this route.

There is some intimation in the record that Mr. Pantry' intended to take advantage of the route to make a trip to his home for personal reasons. However, the accident occurred before the point in the route where he would have deviated or departed therefrom for the purpose of. accomplishing his independent mission. Thus, insofar as the route may bear upon the question, Pantry was acting as the employee of the defendant.

As Mr. Pantry proceeded along the route he “picked up” several children, including the plaintiff herein, who was then 14 years old. As he proceeded on his route plaintiff and some of the other children were standing on the running boards of the delivery truck.

The evidence does not indicate that Pantry was authorized to invite the children to ride. The proof on this point was to the effect that the driver had at one time been instructed not to “pick up” anybody but at another time had been told by the manager that he could carry customers of the store when leaving the store but not to let him (the manager) see him do so.

This proof constiuted an important factor in the trial of this case in the court below, since it was the basis for determining the relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant corporation. If the driver had permission of his employer to invite the children to ride, the children, including the plaintiff, were guests or licensees of the defendant company and the standard of care should have been determined on the basis of that relationship. However, if the driver exceeded his authority, actual or apparent, in inviting the plaintiff to ride, plaintiff was a trespasser so far as the defendant corporation was concerned, and it, through its driver, owed the duty not to wantonly and willfully injure plaintiff, including an obligation to refrain from acts of such gross negligence as to amount to wanton or willful injury, and the further duty to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring her after learning she was in a position of peril. Texas, O. & E. Ry. Co. v. McCarroll (syl. 5) 80 Okla. 282, 195 P. 139; notice, also, Higbee Company v. Walter Jackson, 101 Ohio St. 75, 128 N. E. 61, 14 A.L.R. 131; Patsy Oil & Gas Co. v. Odom, 186 Okla. 116, 96 P. 2d 302.

The question of whether the driver had actual or apparent authority to invite the plaintiff child to ride is relegated to the background in this court on appeal, for the reason that the trial court withheld the issue from the jury and classified plaintiff as a trespasser by requiring in thé charging part of its instructions to the jury that in order to find for the plaintiff it (the jury) must find “from a preponderance of the evidence” that the “acts of negligence were so gross and extreme as to amount to a wanton disregard for the safety of the plaintiff at a time her peril was known to the defendant.”

Thus the trial court resolved any conflict in the evidence (if any existed), on the question of the driver’s authority to invite passengers to ride, in favor of the defendant — a treatment of the issue of fact which was most favorable to the defendant and of which the defendant cannot therefore complain.

Nor can the defendant present a meritorious complaint concerning the failure of the trial court to instruct on the issue of fact thus resolved in its favor without submission to the jury.

Having noted that plaintiff was a trespasser, as to the defendant company, while riding on its delivery truck, we return to a consideration of the happenings after she took her position on the running board.

The truck proceeded on its route. It stopped to let one of the children get off. It then started on, and soon, according to plaintiff’s evidence, was traveling at a dangerous and excessive rate *511 of speed along the unpaved street. It arrived at a point where another child desired to alight. There the truck was, by the alleged gross negligence of Pantry and in wanton disregard of plaintiff’s position of peril on the running board, brought to a sudden stop. The plaintiff was thrown to the ground. The result was a serious and permanent injury to plaintiff, a fracture at the shoulder joint of such a nature as to require the use of a metal screw to place the bones in a position to mend. A partial and permanent loss of use of the arm is the disabling effect of the injury.

In urging that the judgment of the trial court based on the verdict of the jury should be reversed, defendant presents as its first proposition that:

. “It is the duty of the trial court without a request and upon its own initiative to instruct the jury upon all of the vital factors of the tenable legal theories of both litigants concerning the issues of fact.”

Generally speaking, this theory of law is correct. The weakness in defendant’s position lies in the application herein sought.

The trial court did not instruct on the doctrine of respondeat superior. Of this the defendant specifically complains. However, recovery was limited to the gross negligence and wanton disregard of plaintiff’s safety.

The driver of the truck was engaged in his master’s business and was acting in the course of his employment when the accident occurred. There was no issue of fact on that point to be submitted to the jury. Under the undisputed proof the employee had not yet deviated from his route.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Morris v. Sorrells
1992 OK 125 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1992)
Klatt v. Commonwealth Edison Co.
211 N.E.2d 720 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1965)
Morgan v. Bates
1964 OK 55 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1964)
Meyer v. Blackman
381 P.2d 916 (California Supreme Court, 1963)
Stevens v. Barnhill
1954 OK 29 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)
Nelson v. A. M. Lockett & Co.
1952 OK 168 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1952)
St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Simons
176 F.2d 654 (Tenth Circuit, 1949)
Willingham v. Panick
161 F.2d 614 (Tenth Circuit, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1944 OK 78, 153 P.2d 106, 194 Okla. 508, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barell-food-stores-inc-v-bennett-okla-1944.