Brown v. Standard Casket Mfg. Co.

175 So. 358, 234 Ala. 512, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 395
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 14, 1937
Docket3 Div. 217.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 175 So. 358 (Brown v. Standard Casket Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Standard Casket Mfg. Co., 175 So. 358, 234 Ala. 512, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 395 (Ala. 1937).

Opinion

*515 KNIGHT, Justice.

Suit by appellant against the appellees to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by appellant, as the result of a collision between an automobile, owned and operated by an agent or servant of appellee Standard Casket Manufacturing Company and a truck of the appellee Brown & Williamson Tobacco Company, which was at the time operated by one of its servants or agents.

The accident occurred in the daytime, at the intersection of McDonough street and Finley avenue, in the city of Montgomery.

The plaintiff, at the time she was injured, was riding in the car of the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company, which was proceeding north along the said Mc-Donough street, and the accident occurred in the residential section of the city.

The plaintiff stated her case in four counts, but, before the conclusion of the trial, she withdrew count 4, and the cause was tried upon counts 1, 2, and 3, charging, in substance, that her injuries were proximately caused by the negligence of the two defendants, their agents or servants, in causing the automobile and truck to collide.

The court, at the written request of the defendant Standard Casket Manufacturing Company, gave the general affirmative charge in its behalf, but allowed the case to go to the jury as to the defendant Brown & Williamson Tobacco Company. The jury returned a verdict for both defendants, and judgment was duly entered thereon. The plaintiff prosecutes the appeal from said judgment.

It is obvious that the action of the trial court in giving the affirmative charge in favor of the defendant Standard Casket Manufacturing Company, at its request, proceeded upon the theory that the servant or agent of this defendant, in permitting the plaintiff to ride to Montgomery, Ala., in the car of said defendant, was acting beyond the scope and line of his employment; and that, therefore, the defendant Standard Casket Manufacturing Company owed the plaintiff no duty other than not to negligently injure her after its said agent or servant Arnold discovered her peril, or not to wantonly or willfully injure her in operating the automobile. The trial court was of the opinion that, under the evidence, the said defendant’s agent, as a matter of law, was not guilty of either subsequent negligence, or of any willful or wanton misconduct. In this conclusion we concur.

It appears from the evidence, without conflict, that the husband of the plaintiff was in the employ of the Brown Service Funeral Home; that he had quite recently been transferred by his company to Doth-an, there to take charge of the company’s business as district manager. This company was engaged in “writing funeral or burial insurance and providing funerals for its policy holders.”

Mr. Arnold, the operator of the car of the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company, was in The employ of both the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company and the Brown Service Funeral Home. The plaintiff’s husband was not connected in any way with the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company.

On August 31, 1935, Mr. Arnold was in Dothan on business of both companies, and on that day plaintiff’s husband arranged with Arnold for her to ride with him to Montgomery in order to pack the household furniture of her husband, preparatory to the removal of the same to Dothan. The furniture was to be transferred from Montgomery to Dothan at the expense of the Brown Service Funeral Flome.

It was on this trip from Dothan to Montgomery that the car of the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company figured in the collision with the truck of the defendant Brown & Williamson Tobacco Company — and in which plaintiff received her injuries.

There was no evidence in the case, until after the trial, tending, in the slightest degree, to show that the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company had any knowledge of, or had consented to, the arrangement made by plaintiff’s husband with the said Arnold, its agent or servant, by which plaintiff was allowed to ride in the car of the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company to Montgomery.

As to Arnold, the agent or servant of the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company, the plaintiff was, no doubt, an invitee under the rule of our decisions. *516 Wurtzburger v. Oglesby, 222 Ala. 151, 131 So. 9; First National Bank of Dothan et al. v. Sanders, 225 Ala. 417, 143 So. 578. But as to the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company the relation was ostensibly that of a mere licensee. Crider v. Yolande Coal & Coke Co., 206 Ala. 71, 89 So. 285; McCauley v. Tennessee C. I. Co., 93 Ala. 356, 9 So. 611; Lawrence v. Kaul Lumber Co., 171 Ala. 300, 55 So. 111; First-National Bank of Dothan et al. v. Sanders, supra.

Under the evidence, the court committed no error in giving the general affirmative charge for the defendant Standard Casket Manufacturing Company.

While the Brown Service Funeral Home is not a party defendant to this suit, nevertheless, the plaintiff offered to show “to the' court and jury, that Lee Edmundson is the president of the company and owns both of the companies, and Mr. Arnold was his agent, working for both companies at the time; offers to show to the jury and the court that Edmundson was President of the Brown Funeral Home, and is the main stockholder, controlling stockholder and director in the Standard Casket Manufacturing Company, and that Arnold is an agent of his, working for both companies, and was, on that date; and your Honor. * * * ”

The court refused to allow the plaintiff to make this' proof, and to which ruling the plaintiff duly reserved an exception. In this ruling there was no error.

This court, in the case of Jefferson County Burial Society et al. v. Cotton, 222 Ala. 578, 133 So. 256, 259, held the legal fiction of distinct corporate existence may be disregarded in a caSe where a corporation is so organized and controlled, and its affairs are so conducted as to make it merely an instrumentality or adjunct of'another corporation. And it was further held in that case that, while “as a general rule the legal fiction of distinct corporate entity will be recognized and enforced to protect the corporation in the conduct of its business, the principle should not be carried so far as to enable the corporation to become a vehicle to evade just responsibility.”

This statement of the rule is sound, and we are willing to reaffirm it. However, in that case both corporations were sued, and a joint judgment was obtained upon evidence tending to show that the two defendant corporations were the mere “business conduit and alter ego each of the other.”

The evidence offered fell far short of proving that the two defendant corporations were the mere “business conduit and alter ego each of the other.”

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 358, 234 Ala. 512, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-standard-casket-mfg-co-ala-1937.