Cado v. Many

180 So. 185, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 570
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1938
DocketNo. 16904.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 180 So. 185 (Cado v. Many) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cado v. Many, 180 So. 185, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 570 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On April 26, 1932, between 12 o’clock noon and 1 p. m., Nicholas Cado, Jr., aged eight, while on the sidewalk in front of his home on Henry Clay avenue in this city, was struck and injured by a bicycle which was being operated by Lawrence Waguespack *186 (sometimes called Lawrence Junker), an employee of defendant, George J. Many, owner of the bicycle and operator of a nearby drug store known as the Laurel Pharmacy. Alleging that, at the time, Wagues-pack was acting within the scope of his-employment by Many and that his negligence _ was the sole cause of the accident, Mr. and Mrs. Cado, father and mother of the injured boy, seek judgment against Many in their own behalf for medical and other expenses in the sum of $500, and, foi* the use and benefit of young Cado, for his sufferings and injuries, they pray for judgment in the sum of $4,000.

They charge that the operation of the bicycle on the sidewalk, in violation of ordinance No. 1750 C.S., was negligence and was the cause of the accident, for the reason that their young son, not required to anticipate the approach of the bicycle, was struck by it just as he emerged from his yard and stepped upon the sidewalk.

Many, while denying the charges of negligence, placed his main reliance upon the contention that Waguespack, though in his employ, was, at the time of the accident, not acting.within the scope of his employment, for the reason that he had been fully and completely relieved of duty at 12 o’clock in order that he might go to his home for lunch, not being required to return and resume his duties until 1 p. m.

Since it is obvious, from the statements of counsel made in this court, that no great reliance is placed by defendant upon the contention that Waguespack, in riding upon the sidewalk, was not negligent, and since the record contains little evidence indicating that there was a substantial reliance in the court below upon that defense, it-is obvious that the matter went to trial below principally on the issue of whether or not Waguespack was acting within the scope of his employment.

Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs for $153.60 for medical expenses and, on behalf of their minor son, for $750. Defendant has appealed, and plaintiffs have answered the appeal, praying that the judgment be increased to the amount originally sought.

Plaintiffs, though not conceding that in general there is no liability in a master for injuries caused by a servant while going to and returning from meals, although using a conveyance furnished by the master, contend that, even in the absence of special circumstances, the general rule, if there is one, does not apply here, and that there is liability here because of the asserted fact that Waguespack, though at the time on the way to his home to get his lunch, was’ incidentally burdened with packages, the delivery of which was among his principal duties as an employee of defendant.

If that be a fact — that he was accomplishing two objects — the one having to do with the serving of his own interests and the other with the accomplishment of one of the purposes of his employment — -then there can be no doubt as to the liability of the master, and we deem it expedient to first investigate that issue of fact, because, if that issue be decided favorably to plaintiff, we need give no consideration to the question of law, whether a master is liable for injury caused by a servant while on his way to or from a meal in a conveyance furnished by the master.

Plaintiffs rely upon what their counsel is pleased to term “affirmative evidence” and confidently assert that we must accept that evidence as against what they call “negative testimony” tendered by defendant.

That such a rule for the weighing of evidence exists is conceded even by Mr. Wig-more, one of the outstanding authorities on the rules of evidence, who, however, criticizes it as unsound.

“Nevertheless, from some source not traceable, there lingers in the judicial mind, in many quarters, an antiquated notion that negative impressions are not so probative as affirmative impressions; and a charge to the jury often embodies that notion where the witnesses differ. The truth is that the conditions affecting correctness and fullness of observation are so numerous and varied that the one under consideration' has a negligible or minor status. Modern psychology sneers (or smiles) at the law’s crude assumption that the complexities of human perception can be handled by some rules of thumb about negative testimony or the like.” Wigmore on Evidence, 2d Ed., § 664, pp. 1070, 1071.

But we do not view the testimony tendered by defendant as negative. The witness relied upon states: “I did not have any packages at all.” It is this testimony which counsel for plaintiffs characterizes as negative because it contains the word “not.” That is not our understanding of negative testimony. If “A” says that he saw something and “B” says that he did not see it, then obviously, “B’s” statement is negative because the positive view by one person is *187 clearly entitled to more weight than the statement by the other merely that he did not see the thing which the first positively saw. But, if “A” says that “B” had a pack- • age in his hand and “B” says he did not have a package, then we do not see that “B’s” statement is negative in the sense contemplated by the rule of evidence referred to.

But, whatever may be the rule as to the comparative effect of negative as against positive evidence, it seems to us that the evidence tendered by defendant on this point plainly preponderates. Many denies that Wauespack was burdened with packages and, while he did not have recollection as to that particular day,, he states that he had a rule which prevented a delivery hoy from delivering packages during the lunch hour, and his testimony on this point is fully corroborated by Waguespack, who, in addition to testifying concerning the’rules and instructions of the master, states that, as a matter of fact, he- most positively had no packages on that day.

Plaintiffs rely on the statement of Stephen Cado, an uncle of the injured hoy, who claims to have seen the accident from across the street and who says that “Waguespack did have packages.” His recollection as to the nature of the packages was not clear and there is no doubt that, in several instances, his testimony contained contradictions and inaccuracies. In the first place, he testified that when the collision occurred he saw the packages as they flew through the air and he later indicated plainly that he did not know that there were any packages until he saw the hoy, Waguespack, “as he picked them up.” Stephen Cado’s description of the packages is most uncertain and, while the point is not conclusive, we note that, when he was required to state the color of them, he selected blue, although it is positively shown that Many used only green paper in wrapping his packages. A reading of all the evidence on this point convinces us that Waguespack did not have packages with him at the time and, therefore was not directly acting, to that extent, within the scope of his employment.

But plaintiffs’ counsel relies upon his statement of the legal proposition- that there was liability merely by reason of the fact that Waguespack, while on his way to lunch, was operating a vehicle furnished by the master.

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180 So. 185, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cado-v-many-lactapp-1938.