Cherillo v. Steinberg

180 A. 115, 118 Pa. Super. 485, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 87
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 3, 1935
DocketAppeal, 222
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 A. 115 (Cherillo v. Steinberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherillo v. Steinberg, 180 A. 115, 118 Pa. Super. 485, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 87 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

On mature consideration of the pleadings and the evidence, we are of opinion that the averments in the plaintiff’s statement of claim, supported, as they are, by the evidence in the case, will not permit a recovery in this action, and that judgment non obstante veredicto should have been entered in favor of the defendants.

The action was brought by plaintiff against his former employers to recover the damages sustained by him as a result of a wilful and malicious assault upon him by his ‘boss’, or supervisor,—another of defendant’s employees—, because of plaintiff’s refusal, during the lunch hour, and while he was outside the course of his employment, to proceed with his work and press certain clothes.

The statement of claim averred that plaintiff, a minor, was employed by the defendants, who are cleaners and dyers, to operate one of its machines used for pressing men’s suits; that on June 23, 1933 “during the lunch hour, between 12:00 o’clock noon and 1:00 o’clock P. M. while the said [plaintiff] was outside the scope of his employment the said Max Steinberg [defendants’ employee and plaintiff’s boss] in furtherance of the partnership business and as agent, servant and employee of the said defendants ordered the plaintiff......to press some suits which the said plaintiff refused to do...... That upon the said plaintiff’s refusal to perform the said work during his lunch hour, the said Max Stein-berg as agent, servant and employee of the defendants, and in furtherance of the defendant’s business, wilfully and maliciously struck the said [plaintiff] several violent blows and strokes upon his head, face, chest and divers parts of his body”, etc.

*487 In their answer 1 , the defendants did not deny plaintiff’s averment that the matters complained of took place ‘during the lunch hour’ and while plaintiff ‘was outside the scope of his employment’; nor that Max Steinberg wilfully and maliciously struck the plaintiff a number of violent blows, etc.; but they did deny the agency or employment of Max Steinberg, who committed the assault, and that he was at the time employed by the defendants as agent, servant or employee or was acting in furtherance of their business.

We think there was evidence, which while not very strong, was sufficient to go to the jury, that Max Stein-berg was an employee of the defendants at the time of the occurrence complained of, who supervised or directed plaintiff’s work; that he was also a son of one of the partners did not affect defendants’ liability. The jury’s verdict establishes such employment.

The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff and in accord with his version of the facts, is that while he was resting during the lunch hour and on his way from the third floor to the second floor to get a drink of water, Max Steinberg met him at the bottom of the stairs with a couple of suits over his arm. His own story follows:

“He said he wanted me to press the suits for him. I said it was not time yet. He said he had to have them. I said he has to wait until my time is up. He said he wouldn’t wait, and T said I couldn’t do them now. He grabbed me by the arm and pushed me back up the stairs, said he would make me do them. When he got me towards the pressing machine, he said he was going to make me do them. I said I would not do them and he called me a name and I called him a name back and he grabbed me by the arm and hit me in the face with his fist and after he hit me he pushed across towards the stairs and knocked me to the floor and after I was *488 on the floor he started to put his knees on my stomach —I don’t just remember very much after that, and he sent me down to the office. He told me to go down to the office and on going down to the office he told the bookkeeper to pay me off and the bookkeeper gave me my pay and I went home.”

The assault, according to plaintiff’s story, was unprovoked by anything except plaintiff’s calling the attacker a name, after the latter had first called plaintiff a name. It was not connected with Max Steinberg’s duties as supervisor of the pressing machines, nor was it the result of any negligent act on his part. No negligence on the part of the defendants’ agent was averred or proved. The attack was just what the plaintiff had averred in his statement that it was, 'wilful and malicious’.

The Supreme Court has held a number of times that where the act of the employee causing injury was so far removed from the duties of his employment as to have in it no element of negligence, but to have been done wilfully and maliciously, the doctrine 'respondeat superior’ does not apply and the wrongdoer alone is responsible. Thus in McFarlan v. Penna. R. Co., 199 Pa. 408, 49 A. 270, Mr. Justice Mitchell, speaking for the court, said: ''For a wilful or intentional trespass by an employe outside of the line of his duty under his employment it is settled that the employer is not responsible, even though it he committed while the servant is in the exercise of his employment, [italics ours] But in the latter case, its wilful and separate character must appear ...... The jury were bound in finding their verdict to consider and determine not only the fact of the assault but also its character and the circumstances under which it was made. The plaintiff testified that he was an intending passenger and was in the act of entering the car. Prima facie, therefore, he was within the authority and control of the conductor in the course of his employment, and there was other testimony to *489 the same effect. Thus Mrs. Barton, a witness, testified that when the conductor caught hold of the plaintiff he said: ‘Stay off until the people get out’. This was evidence that what the conductor did was not only in the course of his employment but in the supposed performance of his duty in the orderly management of the passengers leaving and entering the train. If in so doing he used unnecessary violence the employer would be liable, and the jury have so found.” This was approved and followed in Berryman v. Penna. R. Co., 228 Pa. 621, 77 A. 1011, where plaintiff, who was returning home from hunting, got off the train at his destination followed by one Bledsoe, a policeman in the employ of the railroad company. The latter called to him, “Hey there, Berryman”, whereupon he stopped, resting the stock of his gun on the station platform, and as he was thus standing Bledsoe began shooting at him from a revolver, while four or five steps away, and seriously wounded him. The court, speaking through Mr. Justice Stewart, said: “That the act of Bledsoe was wilful and malicious on the plaintiff’s showing, admits of no question. Was it something separate from the duty he owed his employer? Let the facts answer. Plaintiff had not been guilty of any violation of law; no information had been lodged against him; he was not disturbing the peace; and manifestly the assault could not have been made with a view to accomplishing his arrest. Plaintiff was peaceably departing from the station on his way to his home, disturbing no one, when he was halted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 A. 115, 118 Pa. Super. 485, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherillo-v-steinberg-pasuperct-1935.