Feore v. Trammel

104 So. 808, 213 Ala. 293, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 302
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 11, 1925
Docket1 Div. 348.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 104 So. 808 (Feore v. Trammel) 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
Feore v. Trammel, 104 So. 808, 213 Ala. 293, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 302 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

The action is by appellee for personal injuries suffered in a collision between two automobiles at the intersection of Conti and Bayou streets in the city of Mobile. The car for the operation of which appellant was held responsible was being driven by her daughter Esther south on Bayou street; appellee was a guest in the other car driven by Miss Mott east on Conti street. By an ordinance of the city cars moving .east or west have the right of way over ears moving north or south at street intersections. There <an be no doubt that the question of negligence involved was a question for the jury. The issue most actively litigated is whether defendant, Mrs. Feore, should be held to answer for the negligence of her daughter on the principle of respondeat superior, and thi^ issue is presented by rulings on questions of evidence, exceptions to parts of the oral charge, and special instructions in writing given and refused. We have found no better way to treat these questions than to state them seriatim as they appear in the assignments of error.

The court did not sustain an objection to defendant’s (question on cross-examination to the witness Spencer, “Do you know whose car it was?” (referring to the car driven by defendant’s daughter), as the first assignment of error assumes. Nor was any harm done by the court’s exclusion of the answer which was to the effect that the witness knew only what Esther had told him, what Esther told him remaining undisclosed, nor was it asked for.

There was no error in sustaining plaintiff’s objection to defendant’s further question to the same witness, “Did she” — meaning Esther- — -“make any statement to you after the accident?” Even though we assume that the witness would have repeated a statement by Esther that she owned the car she was driving — the disputed ownership of which appears to have been the overshadowing issue in the cause — the answer, as affecting the liability of defendant, was nothing better than hearsay. Barfield v. Evans, 187 Ala. 589, 65 So. 928. Esther’s statement, whatever it may have been, oould not have been made at the *298 time of the accident, and so the demand for its admission justified .on the ground that it was of the class of spontaneous exclamations admissible without the guaranty of an oath, for the witness, who was asked to repeat it, was not there to hear what may have been said at that time.

The ruling sustaining an objection to defendant’s question on direct examination to her witness Mrs. White cannot be held for error. The question was: “Did you ever, prior to the accident, hear Mrs. Feore make any statement as to whose car it was?” The objection was general, and on appeal the ruling must be sustained, if there was any good reason whatever why the testimony sought by the question should have been excluded. A self-disserving statement by defendant at a time when there was no reason to anticipate trouble would have been competent and relevant without regard to its connection with possession or other concrete act of ownership. Barfield v. Evans, supra. If, however, defendant’s statement as it would have been reported by the witness, was that she owned the car, defendant suffered no prejudice by its rejection. In these circumstances, to fasten error upon the trial court it seems that defendant should have stated to the court the nature of the answer she expected the witness to make. Burgess v. Am. Mtg. Co., 115 Ala. 473, 22 So. 282; Mobile Life Ins. Co. v. Pruett, 74 Ala. 487.

Authorities sustain the proposition that defendant was entitled to have the answer of her witness, “Well, Mrs. Feore told me she was going to give her” — meaning her daughter Esther — “a car.” The title to the car was not directly involved. No judgment was to be rendered affecting the title to the car. But the ownership of the car was a circumstance relevant to the question whether the driver, Miss Esther, was acting at the time of the accident as the servant or agent of defendant or upon her own initiative, and every indication afforded by the record points to the conclusion that this question of title was decisive of the related question of responsibility for the accident. The declaration of the alleged donor that she intended to give her daughter a car, made at a time when no motive for misstatement appeared, should have been admitted in evidence. Powell v. Olds, 9 Ala. 861; Gillespies’ Adm’r v. Burleson, 28 Ala. 562. We do not find the authority of these cases intentionally or necessarily shaken by the decision in McAdams v. Beard, 34 Ala. 478. On the contrary, their authority is expressly recognized. There is a typographical error somewhere in the report of that case, and that may account for the fact that it is cited as limiting the effect of the previous cases. Our opinion is that they are all'in harmony, and establish a principle according to which this answer of the witness White should have been allowed to remain with the jury. Nor do we find that at any other place defendant had the benefit of this witness’ testimony to the same fact.

Defendant’s sworn application — at least it purported to be her sworn application — to the judge of probate for a certificate of ownership of the car driven by her daughter at the time of the accident, in which application she stated that she had purchased or acquired the car previous to the accident, and the questions propounded in connection therewith, were properly allowed to go to the jury for what they were worth. That was about a y,ear after the accident, but the statements made by defendant in the affidavit and in connection therewith tended to contradict her previous testimony, and were therefore relevant and competent.

The exceptions to the court’s oral charge, made the subject of the thirteenth, ’ fourteenth, and fifteenth assignments of error, were not well taken. The trial court did not instruct the jury that defendant “could be liable under the facts of this base if she did not own the car,” as the brief for appellant assumes. As we read the record, the effort of the court was to instruct the jury to the effect that, while ownership of the car was a circumstance to be considered, it was not conclusive either way, and in this the court was entirely right.

The court also instructed the jury without error, as shown by assignments sixteenth to nineteenth, both inclusive. The language of the court, as shown by these excerpts from the oral charge, was employed while instructing the jury that the fact that Esther Feore was the daughter of defendant and lived under her mother’s roof and as a member of her family might be considered in determining whether she acted as the agent or employee of her mother on the occasion in question. In the context the court further informed the jury, in substance, that the issues of fact referred to in these assignments, thirteenth to nineteenth, were to be determined ,by the jury from the evidence in the cause. While the verdict of the jury may have been based upon a misapprehension of the rules of law and justice involved in the rule of respondeat superior — as applied to the facts of this case, we apprehend, a matter of no small difficulty — we do not find that; the court in the matters referred to committed error. Perhaps, also, the court, when it advised the jury, as it did in effect, that Esther was acting as the agent or employee of defendant at the time of the accident, if at that time she was carrying out the instructions of her mother, express or implied, explained the theory of respondeat superior as fully as the emergency demanded.

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

Related

Kelly v. State
423 So. 2d 343 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1982)
Stevens v. Rice (In Re Rice)
18 B.R. 562 (N.D. Alabama, 1982)
Palm v. Kulesza
131 N.E.2d 472 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1956)
Burnett v. Garrison
75 So. 2d 144 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1954)
Louisville N. R. Co. v. Scott
167 So. 572 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1935)
Norris v. State
156 So. 556 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1934)
Kelly v. Hanwick
153 So. 269 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1934)
Carter v. State
145 So. 814 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Houston v. Town of Waverly
142 So. 80 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)
Mobile & O. R. Co. v. Watson
130 So. 199 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Morgan Hill Paving Co. v. Pratt City Sav. Bank
127 So. 500 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 So. 808, 213 Ala. 293, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feore-v-trammel-ala-1925.