Dinsmoor v. Wolber

85 Ill. App. 152, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 881
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 12, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 Ill. App. 152 (Dinsmoor v. Wolber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dinsmoor v. Wolber, 85 Ill. App. 152, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 881 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action on the case, by appellant against appellee, brought to recover damages for injuries to himself and property and loss of services of his wife, resulting from the alleged negligence of a servant of appellee.

The declaration contained three counts. The first charged that while appellant and his wife, on April 28, 1897, were riding along a certain public highway, a servant of appellee, driving a team of the latter, so carelessly and negligently drove said team that the same, and the tongue of the wagon to which they were attached, struck the carriage and horse of appellant, crushing the carriage, injuring the horse and throwing appellant to the ground, whereby he was damaged, etc. The second count charged that by reason of said alleged negligence on the part of the servant of appellee, plaintiff became sick and was prevented from attending to his business, was deprived of the services of his wife for a long space of time, was obliged to pay out money for her care and nursing and for extra servants, and also for the repair of his carriage, etc. The third count charged that the injury was caused by the willful, wanton, malicious and careless conduct of the defendant. To this declaration the general issue was filed, and upon the trial- the jury -found a verdict for appellee, and judgment was entered against appellant for costs. Appellant complains that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence; that the court excluded proper evidence and improperly instructed the jury.

It appears from the evidence that, at the time appellant received the injury complained of, he was driving along at a rapid-trot in a covered buggy, going from Sterling toward . his home, some two and a half miles distant. It was raining a little and the top of the buggy was up and the side curtains on. He was driving in the middle of the road, which at that place was comparatively level and some sixty-seven feet wide, when he was run into by a team belonging to defendant and driven by one Matthias Appenzeller, his servant. Appellant and his wife were thrown forward upon the ground, receiving severe injuries, and the buggy was badly broken. He testified that his horse ran away and was so badly frightened as to be ruined for use as a family horse thereafter. Appellee was a farmer, living some seven or eight miles north of Sterling, and on the day in question he and his said servant had been to that place to deliver two wagon loads of stock. Appellee drove home with one of the teams a short time after the stock was delivered, directing Appenzeller, as he says, to come home, as he had lots of work for him. The latter, however, remained until about six o’clock p. m. before starting back. That the injuries complained of were caused, at the time alleged, by the negligence or willfulness of Appenzeller, the servant of appellee, is not denied. Appellee, however, knew nothing concerning the' matter until some time after it occurred, and insists that, under the circumstances of the case, he is not liable for the acts of his said servant.

In Reeve’s Domestic Relations, at page 358, the law upon this question is thus stated :

“ This subject may be illustrated by the following case: A, the servant of B, is employed by him to drive his wagon. A, whilst driving his wagon, leaves it in the road and commits a battery upon 0. B would not be liable. But if A had continued driving the wagon and drove with violence over C, with design to injure 0, B would have been liable. In the first place, A had abandoned his master’s business; in the latter case he was in the immediate pursuit of it, though done in such a manner as to injure another person; or, in other words, in the first place he was not driving his master’s wagon, which he was employed to do; in the last he was.’?

Wood, in his work on Master and Servant, Section 280, states the rule as follows:

“ If a servant driving his master’s carriage along the highway, carelessly runs over a bystander, * * * the person injured has a right to treat the wrongful act as the act of the master; quifaeitper almim, faeit per se. If the master himself had driven his carriage improperly * * * he would have been directly responsible, and the law does not permit him to escape liability because the act complained of was not done by his own hand.”

In Chicago City Railway Co. v. McMahon, 103 Ill. 485, it is said:

“ Few actions would be maintainable if a recovery could be had only in cases where express authority is given or the agent is required to commit the wrong. It is a general rule, without exception, that when a servant exercises his power or performs his duty, in so careless or negligent a manner that wrong ensues to another, the master is liable in damages.”

In the case of Christian v. Irwin, 125 Ill. 619, where the plaintiff and another man were riding in a buggy along a street in Chicago, and at the intersection of another street, and while they were observing due care for their personal safety, were run into by the horse and wagon of defendant, then being driven by his servant, by which plaintiff sustained severe injuries, it was held that the master was liable for the misconduct of his servant.

It is contended by appellee that in this case the injury ' complained of was caused by the willful misconduct of the servant, outside of the line of his employment, and that therefore there should be no recovery. We do not think this position, however, is sustained by the authorities.

In Arasmith v. Temple, 11 Ill. App. 39, it is said, in speaking of the liability of the master for the acts of his servant, “having set the servant to work about his own business, with the right to direct and control him as to the manner of doing it, he ought to answer to others for whatever injury was suffered by reason of what he so does, or of the manner in which he does it; and equally so whether it be willful or only careless or unskillful.”

To the same effect is the case of T. W. & W. R. R. Co. v. Harmon, 47 Ill. 298.

There is no controversy as to the main facts in the case.

On the occasion in question the servant was driving home from market, whither he had gone in company with his master at an earlier hour, along the road usually traveled from such market to the home of his master, driving the latter’s team, and, in that regard, doing the very thing for which his master had employed him, and while so engaged, he carelessly or willfully caused the injury complained of. Under such circumstances we think appellee was liable for the wrongful act of his servant, and that the jury should have found for the appellant.

Under the third count of the declaration proof was introduced tending to show that appellee’s servant willfully, wantonly and maliciously ran into appellant, thereby inflicting the injuries complained of. The trial court refused appellant’s twelfth instruction, which stated that if the jury found appellee guilty, and that the injury complained of was inflicted by the gross, willful and wanton recklessness of the latter’s servant, they were at ^liberty to give exemplary damages against appellee; and gave appellee’s third instruction, which advised the jury that exemplary damages could not be recovered.

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Bluebook (online)
85 Ill. App. 152, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinsmoor-v-wolber-illappct-1899.