Berggren v. Hannan, O'Dell & Van Brunt

215 N.W. 556, 116 Neb. 18, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 135
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1927
DocketNo. 24426
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 215 N.W. 556 (Berggren v. Hannan, O'Dell & Van Brunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berggren v. Hannan, O'Dell & Van Brunt, 215 N.W. 556, 116 Neb. 18, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 135 (Neb. 1927).

Opinion

Eldred, District Judge.

August Berggren brought suit against Hannan, O’Dell & Van Brunt, Incorporated, and George Baker to recover damages for an injury received December 2, 1922, at about 8:45 p. m. as a result of being struck by an automobile while walking on a sidewalk on the east side of Tenth street, north of Pierce street, in the city of Omaha. The car which struck plaintiff was owned by the defendant Hannan, O’Dell & Van Brunt, Incorporated. The defendant Baker was an employee of the defendant company, engaged in the business of selling automobiles for said company in the city of Omaha. The defendant Baker was permitted to drive an automobile of the company in connection with his work as salesman for said company; the car causing the plaintiff’s injury being one furnished Baker by the company for that purpose; and the defendant Baker sometimes so used said automobile after the regular working hours.

The petition sets out certain alleged negligent acts claimed to have been the proximate cause of plaintiff’s in[20]*20jury; and further alleges that at the time of the accident the car was being used by the defendant Baker in the course of his employment, and within the scope of his authority. The answer is, in effect, a general denial. From an adverse verdict and judgment against both defendants, the defendant company has appealed.

Five errors are assigned in brief upon which the defendant relies for a reversal. The first two assignments of error raise the question of the sufficiency and competency of the evidence to sustain the verdict; that is, it is urged there was no competent evidence that the driver of the automobile at the time of the accident was a servant of the defendant company, engaged in driving the automobile of the company on the master’s business or pleasure, or with the knowledge and consent of the master. By the three remaining assignments, error is charged in-the admission in evidence of certain declarations of the defendant Baker made some time after the accident, and after his employment by the company had terminated.

On behalf of the plaintiff four witnesses identified the defendant Baker as the driver of the car at the time of the accident. Baker testified that he was not driving the car, and was not present, but claimed the car was stolen from in front of his boarding house; two other witnesses testified that Baker was at the boarding house at the time the accident occurred. Baker’s testimony is contradicted, to some extent at least, by evidence of declarations made by him bearing upon the accident. The evidence conflicting, the issue as to the identity of the driver of the car was a question for the determination of the jury.

Witness Oathout was called by the plaintiff in making his case in chief, and testified, over objections of the company, to the following declarations by Baker, made some time after the accident, and at a time when he was no longer employed by the defendant company:

“Q. What was said at the interview at the ‘Y’ by you or by him ? A. ‘Why;’ I says, ‘Mr. Baker,’ I says, ‘how you come to be here?’ ‘Well,’ he says, T came down here and I am go[21]*21ing to school here.’ ‘Well,’ I says, ‘the last time I saw you you was in Omaha.’ ‘Yes,’ he says T know I was in Omaha, but,’ he says, T got into some trouble down there,’ and he says, ‘they just rode the devil out of me and I made up my mind I would leave.’ I says, ‘What trouble did you get into?’ ‘Well,’ he says, T was working for the Van Brunt people driving the car and got into an accident down there on Tenth and Pierce,’ and he says, ‘they had me arrested and fined me,’ and he says, T made up my mind I would leave.’ And 1 asked him, I says, ‘Don’t you remember me ?’ And he says, ‘No; I don’t,’ I says, T am the gentleman that you run into down on Tenth and Pierce.’ ‘Oh! yes.’ But he says, T didn’t drive that ear.’ Q. Didn’t what? A. He says, T didn’t drive that car.’ He says, ‘That car was stolen.’ So he just talked along there about the conversation and that was about all there was to it. * * * Q. What, if anything, was said as to his using the car to visit prospects in the evening? A. He said he did. Q. What further did he say as to the use of the car in the evening to visit prospects, if you can recall, if anything? A. He said whenever he had the car out he was always on duty; that his sales came at any time; that whenever he saw prospects he.was out to make a deal.”

It is now strenuously urged by the company that the admission of these answers constituted prejudicial error. The plaintiff was seeking to recover judgment against the defendant Baker as well as against the defendant company. But the company urges that as to the defendant Baker the question for whom he may have been acting at the time was not an issue; that if Baker was driving the car his liability did not depend upon that question. The facts disclosed by the first answer were not only competent, but very material in making a case against the defendant Baker. The second answer quoted is more favorable to the defendant than the plaintiff. While the answers to the two remaining questions were not so material, they did disclose how Baker happened to be at the place in question, and his reasons for being there, and would have a tendency to throw some light [22]*22upon the probability of the evidence upon this disputed point. As against the defendant Baker this evidence was clearly admissible:

“The admissions and declarations of a party to an action against his own interest, upon a material matter, are admissible against him as original evidence, and, where he is examined as a witness in his own behalf, it is unnecessary to lay a foundation for the admission of such evidence by cross-examination.” Young v. Kinney, 79 Neb. 421.

The evidence being admissible to make out plaintiff’s case as against the defendant Baker, it was properly received, notwithstanding it may have had some ulterior or collateral effect detrimental to the other defendant. Cleland v. Anderson, 66 Neb. 252; Gibbard v. Cursan, 225 Mich. 311; Lampton v. Davis Standard Bread Co., 48 Cal. App. 116.

Among other authorities cited by appellant in support of its contention that the declarations should not have been admitted are the following from this jurisdiction: Clancy v. Barker, 71 Neb. 83; Shoemaker v. Commercial Union Assurance Co., 75 Neb. 587; Gale Sulkey Harrow Co. v. Laughlin, 31 Neb. 103. An examination of the authorities so cited convinces us they are not controlling in this case; each of those cases was based on a contractual right; and in none of them was the agent or servant, whose declaration was offered, a party to the suit.

The court could not properly have sustained the objections and kept the evidence complained of from the jury. The most the court could have done would have been to instruct the jury that such evidence could only be considered for the limited and specific purpose for which it was admitted. Such an instruction would have been proper, and doubtless would have been given, if tendered.

If the defendant company desired to limit the purpose and application of any evidence admitted, an instruction to that end should have been requested. But such request was not made.

“If either party desires an instruction which would serve only to guide the jury in weighing certain features of the [23]*23evidence in connection with the issues, he must request such specific instruction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 556, 116 Neb. 18, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berggren-v-hannan-odell-van-brunt-neb-1927.