Fimple v. Southern Pacific Co.

177 P. 871, 38 Cal. App. 727, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 132
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 22, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1881.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 177 P. 871 (Fimple v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fimple v. Southern Pacific Co., 177 P. 871, 38 Cal. App. 727, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 132 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HART, J.

Plaintiff brought the action to recover damages for the death of her husband, alleged to have been negligently caused by the defendants. The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant, McKnight, and in favor of plaintiff against the defendant, Southern Pacific Company, in the sum of twenty thousand dollars. Judgment was entered accordingly and defendant, Southern Pacific Company, appeals frpm that portion thereof awarding damages against it.

Thomas V. Pimple met his death on the fourteenth day of July, 1914, being struck by a “light” engine then in charge of the defendant McKnight, while driving an automobile across the railroad tracks of the corporation, near the town of Durham, - in Butte County. With Pimple in the automobile was a young man named William Drouillard, who was also killed. His father, Edward Drouillard, brought an action for damages against the same defendants, in which judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff. That action was before us on appeal (Civ. No. 1778) and a decision affirming the judgment was filed in this court on March 4, 1918. (Drouillard v. Southern Pac. Co., 36 Cal. App. 447, [172 Pac. 405].) A very full statement of the circumstances under which the accident occurred may be found therein, to which we refer.

Appellant urges a reversal of the judgment on two grounds: 1. That the verdict of the jury exonerating defendant McKnight operated also to exonerate the defendant Southern Pacific Company; and, 2. Contributory negligence of the deceased.

It cannot be doubted that it is the law that, unless the appellant participated in the negligence which it is charged produced the injuries and consequent death of the deceased, or that it committed some different and distinct act of negligence, separate from and independent of that of its engineer and codefendant, McKnight, which, concurring with that of McKnight, proximately produced the injuries whereby the deceased lost his life, the appellant cannot be held liable for the death of Pimple, since its codefendant and agent was ac *729 quitted by the jury of all blame or culpability for said injuries and death. In other words, if the damage was negligently produced by the defendant, McKnight, the locomotive engineer, while he was engaged in discharging his duties as a servant or agent of the appellant, and the negligence of said defendant so producing the damage was not personally participated in or aided by some negligent act of the appellant wholly independent of and dissociated from the act of the engineer, then a verdict acquitting the latter of culpable negligence is necessarily a verdict likewise acquitting the appellant, for the very obvious reason that where injury is solely the result of the negligence of the servant while performing his duties as such, the principal’s liability for such injury can follow only from the relationship existing between the master and servant as such. They are not joint tort-feasors, so that either or both may be sued for the tort committed.

The doctrine above stated has been explained and applied in many cases. Thus, in Lake Shore etc. B. Co. v. Goldberg, 2 111. App. 228, one of a number of defendants jointly sued in trespass was acquitted. The appellant had committed the trespass, if any was committed, only through its agent. At the trial the appellant introduced as a defense the judgment exonerating the defendant first above referred to. The reviewing court, holding that the defense should be sustained, said: “But where the real actor, none the less liable personally because acting for another, is not guilty, it necessarily follows that the party for whom he acted cannot be. The principal can be no more guilty by reason of the act of his agent than if he had committed the act in person and the party who was alone charged to have committed the act in person was conclusively adjudged - not guilty. We see no escape from our conclusion, and for authority refer to Thomas v. Bwmsey 6 Johns. (N. Y.) 26, and Henry v. Fowler, 39 Me. 326 (63 Am. Dec. 627).”

In Doremus v. Boot, 23 Wash. 710, [54 L. B. A. 649, 63 Pac. 572], the plaintiff brought the action against Boot and the Oregon Bailroad & Navigation Company for damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff in a collision between two freight trains of the railroad company. Boot was the conductor of one of the trains and the plaintiff a fireman on the other. The collision was due, so it was alleged, to the failure of Boot, who had been duly apprised of an approaching train *730 from the opposite direction, to obey instructions given him to stop and sidetrack his train at a certain named station and there wait until the other train passed. The verdict rendered was in favor of the plaintiff as against the railroad company, but was silent as to Root, and the Washington court held such silence to be tantamount to an acquittal of Root of culpability. Judgment was rendered upon the verdict in favor of the plaintiff against the railroad company and in favor of Root, and the supreme court reversed the judgment and remanded the case, with instructions to the court below to enter judgment for the railroad company. The principle above referred to was elaborately considered in that case, the court-holding that the exoneration of Root from legal responsibility for the injuries received by the plaintiff necessarily operated to acquit the railroad company of blame. The court, among other things, said: “It must be borne in mind, however, that there are wide distinctions between the ordinary action for' injuries, where all of the defendants participated in the wrongful act which caused the injury, and actions like the one before us, where one is liable because he committed the act and the other by operation of law, both with respect to the relations of the defendants to each other and to the injured person. Joint tort-feasors are liable to the injured person (other than that he may have but one satisfaction) as if the act causing the injury was the separate act of each of them, and they have, except in certain special cases, no right of contribution among themselves. But the defendants in this character of action are in no sense joint tort-feasors, nor-does their liability to the plaintiff rest on the same or like grounds. The act of an employee, even in legal intendment, is not the act of his employer, unless the employer either previously directs the act to be done or subsequently ratifies it. For injuries done by the negligent act of an employee not directed or ratified by the employer the employee is liable because he committed the act which caused the injury, while the employer is liable, not as if the act was done by himself, but because of the doctrine of respondeat superior—the rule of law which holds the master responsible for the negligent act of his servant committed while the servant is acting within the general scope of his employment, and engaged in his. master’s business. The primary liability to answer for such an act therefore rests upon the employee, and when the em-

*731 ployer is compelled to answer in damages therefor he can recover over against the employee. (Oceanic Steam Nav. Co., Ltd., v. Companía Trans. Espanola, 134 N. Y. 461, [30 Am. St. Rep. 685, 31 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
177 P. 871, 38 Cal. App. 727, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fimple-v-southern-pacific-co-calctapp-1918.