De Soto Motor Corp. v. Vann

66 F.2d 753, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2765
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1933
DocketNo. 799
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 753 (De Soto Motor Corp. v. Vann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Soto Motor Corp. v. Vann, 66 F.2d 753, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2765 (10th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

The appellee recovered judgment against appellant on account of personal injuries received by her in an automobile wreck, caused, she alleged, by one Briggs, appellant’s agent, who negligently managed and drove the automobile. Two other persons in the car with Briggs and appellee died from the injuries which they received. Actions for damages on account of their deaths were reviewed by this court in De Soto Motor Corp. v. Stewart, 62 F.(2d) 914. Appellant now brings here the judgment recovered by Sue Vann for the injuries which she suffered in the same wreck.

The car- in which the four persons were riding belonged to appellant. It was in the possession of Briggs as appellant’s agent. Mr. Clough, stationed at Denver, was district manager for appellant in Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. Clough had charge of all the dealers handling appellant’s cars in the three- states named. The selling of appellant’s cars in that territory was. under the direction of Clough. At the time of the accident Briggs had been assigned to New Mexico to visit the different agencies there where its cars were being sold, to advise with them and assist them. Briggs and other' like agents were furnished a new ear from time to time in which to go from place to place in discharge of their duties, and they were under instructions to sell the car before it had traveled 5,000 miles. The way in which Briggs was to find a purchaser for the ear furnished to him was left to his discretion. The price which he was to get was fixed by Mr. Clough. Briggs had authority to look for a purchaser at any time after he took the car out. He could sell the ear as an ordinary automobile dealer sells ears. Mr. Clough met Briggs at Las Vegas and went with him from there to Santa Eé and Albuquerque. When he left Briggs, Clough gave sufficient routing to Briggs to occupy Briggs’ time until he should be furnished with further instructions. Clough then went to Detroit. Briggs was to do what he could to further the company’s business at the places to- which he was sent.

While Clough was in Detroit it was decided to hold a conference of all the company’s representatives in the three states at Denver, and Clough wired Briggs to return to Denver for that conference. Briggs had not completed his duties in New Mexico. He left Gallup after dinner on June 15, 1930, in the ear for Albuquerque, where he expected to leave it, if he did not sell it, and take the train to Denver for the purpose of attending the conference. Briggs, while at Gallup, tried to interest Charles Epperson in the purchase of the ear he was using. He had talked with Epperson on more than one occasion and had shown the car to him, and apparently he thought Epperson was a prospective purchaser. Briggs asked Epperson to accompany him in the ear from Gallup to Albuquerque. Mrs. Epperson had gone to California, but appellee, her sister, was at the Epperson home in Gallup, and when Briggs asked Epperson to go he replied that he could not leave Mrs. Vann alone. Thereupon Briggs invited Mrs. Vann to go also, saying to her, according to her testimony:

“You must come and go along, if you don’t Mr. Epperson will not go, and he is interested in this ear, and I am going to sell it, and let him come home in it from Albuquerque. If you don’t go Mr. Epperson will not go either.”

Mrs. Vann then consented to go. , She further testified without contradiction that Epperson was invited on the trip by Briggs for the purpose of further demonstrating the car with a view to a sale. Prior to Mrs. Vann’s decision to go Mr. Briggs had invited Mr. Stewart of Gallup to ride with him to Albuquerque. At that time he did not know that Mr. Epperson and Mrs. Vann would go.

The four persons named left Gallup at 11:00 o’clock at night. When they, started the party was seated in the car thus: Mr. Briggs and Mrs. Vann on the front seat, and Mr. Epperson and Mr. Stewart on the rear seat. Mr. Briggs drove the car from Gallup to Grants, a distance of approximately sixty-five miles. They arrived at Grants about 1:00 A. M. and stopped to attend a dance there. An hour or so later the party left Grants for Albuquerque. The car left the highway at a sharp curve about fifty-four miles from Grants at 3:45 A. M., June 16th. The evidence indicates it was traveling at a high rate of speed.

Mrs. Vann testified that Briggs was driving the ear when the accident occurred, that she was sitting by him on his right, that the four persons were seated in the car just as they were when they left Gallup, and that no change in that respect had been made prior to the accident. Mrs. Whitesides re[755]*755sided in the town of Grants. She was acquainted with Mrs. Vann, Mr. Epperson and Mr. Stewart. She testified she saw them at the dance with Mr. Briggs, and talked with Mrs. Vann, that she saw the party in the ear as they left Grants, that Mr. Briggs was then driving the car, that he had his coat off, that Mrs. Vann sat by him on the front seat, and that Mr. Stewart and Mr. Epperson were in the back seat, and they had their coats on.

Mr. Briggs, whoso testimony was obtained by deposition, testified that ho was not driving the ear after it left Grants, that Mr. Epperson took the wheel at Grants and after that Epperson was at the wheel all the time, that Stewart and Epperson took the front seats at Grants and he and Mrs. Vann the rear, and they were seated that way when the accident occurred. He said he could not remember a single thing that occurred after they left Grants until after the accident, that the doctors might explain that from his head injury.

Mr. Witte, Ms wife, and his brother and his wife, were the first to arrive at the scene of the accident. lie and Mrs. Witte had been to Albuquerque to meet his brother and his wife, who came from Detroit to make them a visit. On returning home they came upon the scene about twenty minutes after 4:00 o’clock A. M. They saw the wrecked car at the side of the road, stopped, and discovered the four' persons that had been thrown from the ear lying on the ground, each of them severely injured and in great pain. The wrecked car was about twenty-five to thirty feet from the road. It had left the road at the curve. Mr. Witte said it looked as if it had turned over two or three times. Most of its top had been torn off. He gave this description of what they found:

“Mrs. Vann’s body was badly twisted and her clothing practically torn off. Mr. Briggs was lying on the ground on his side with his knees over Mrs. Vann’s neck and head, pressing her face down into the dirt. Mr. Stewart was about twenty-five feet farther than Mrs. Vann and Mr. Briggs and was lying on his left side. * * * Mr. Epperson was about twenty-five feet from the car, but in a little different angle than Mrs. Vann and Mr. Briggs. There was no indication on the ground that Mr. Stewart had moved from where he struck. It appeared he had traveled all the distance in the air. • * *

“When we picked Mrs. Vann up the front cushion of the car was about six feet from her and Mr. Briggs. We removed the rear cushion of the ear, placed it along the side of the front cushion and put Mrs. Vann on it. * * * The front cushion was a little bit farther away from, the car than Mrs. Vann and Mr. Briggs, but in the same direction from the car-. * * * Inside the wrecked car we found one of Mrs. Vann’s shoes in the front compartment, directly in front of the driver’s seat. We also found Mrs. Vann’s hat in the ear. * '" * Her other shoe was found on the ground to the right of the front right wheel. * * *

“We asked Mr. Epperson if he was driving the ear. He said he was. We questioned Mr.

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

Related

Landers v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.
386 P.2d 46 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1963)
Woolf v. Holton
224 S.W.2d 861 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 753, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-soto-motor-corp-v-vann-ca10-1933.