Hardware Mutual Casualty Company v. Bewayne Jones, Infant, and Louis Jones

363 F.2d 627
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1966
Docket10035
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 363 F.2d 627 (Hardware Mutual Casualty Company v. Bewayne Jones, Infant, and Louis Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardware Mutual Casualty Company v. Bewayne Jones, Infant, and Louis Jones, 363 F.2d 627 (4th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

*628 MAXWELL, District Judge.

The controversy presently before the Court was the subject of an earlier opinion, reported as Hardware Mutual Casualty Company, Appellant v. Jones and Jones, Appellees, 330 F.2d 1014 (1964). The opinion on that appeal reversed and remanded for a new trial. A new trial was subsequently held in the District Court, and upon a jury verdict and judgment in favor of Hardware Mutual Casualty Company, Bewayne Jones and Louis Jones now present the controversy for the second time to this Court.

Appellants on this second appeal raise four questions:

1. Did the Court err in its main charge and supplemental charge to the jury on permission or consent, express or implied ? ,

2. Did the Court err in submitting to the jury any issue of fact as to whether the 1947 Pontiac automobile was used principally in the operation of the business of the dealer, Phillips Brothers, employer of Heekstall?

3. Did the Court err in submitting to the jury as an issue of fact whether or not Womack intended to loan dealer tags to Heekstall as a buyer?

4. Did the .Court err in denying Jones’ motion for a directed verdict in their favor against Hardware?

In summary, after a review of the entire record presented on this second appeal, we conclude that each of the questions presented by Appellants herein must be answered in the negative.

The record before us from the second trial of this matter in the District Court reflects that on March 1, 1961, Hardware Mutual Casualty Company issued an automobile garage liability insurance policy to “Automoville, Inc., Tench H. Phillips, Jr., Tench H. Phillips & G. Connolly Phillips, d/b/a Phillips Bros. Automoville,” 7100 Military Highway, Norfolk, Virginia. The named insureds were engaged in the new and used automobile business. Their used car place of business was at Little Creek Road, also in Norfolk, Virginia.

The applicable parts of the policy require payment on behalf of the insured for all sums which he becomes legally ■ obligated to pay by reason of “the use for non-business purposes of (1) any automobile owned by or in charge of the named insured and used principally in the above defined operations.” The policy defines an insured as “any person while using an automobile covered by this policy, and any person or organization legally responsible for the use thereof, provided the actual use of the automobile is by the named insured or with his permission.” 1

Phillips Bros. Automoville employed Elbert L. Heekstall as a lot boy to clean, wash and recondition cars for sale, and his employment was at the used car lot. He had been so employed for a period of about three years.

*629 In August, 1960, Phillips Bros. Auto-moville obtained by trade-in a 1947 Pontiac automobile. The car was on the used car lot and Heckstall indicated an interest in buying it. Tench Phillips, an officer of the company, agreed to sell the car to Heckstall for a price of either fifty dollars or eighty dollars, the testimony on this point being confused, and Heckstall was to pay ten dollars a week on the ear until paid in full. There was some testimony that the installment payments were to be five dollars a week. The total amount actually paid on the car, however, was twenty dollars. Tench Phillips loaned Heckstall his dealer license plates to enable Heckstall to take the car home to “do some work on it.” The certificate of title for the automobile was not delivered to Heckstall at the time of the delivery of the automobile to him. According to the record, it was assumed that some mechanical work, installing seat covers or polishing the car, was the purpose of Heckstall taking the car from the used car lot to his home.

There is no question in the record of this case that selling cars is within the scope of the business of Phillips Bros. Automoville, and it appears from the record that on at least four occasions Tench Phillips loaned his dealer license plates to Heckstall to enable Heckstall to use the Pontiac automobile. There is testimony in the record of this case that the car had been in the possession of Heckstall for three months, and there is also testi'mony that the car had been in Heckstall’s possession for about nine months. The car was carried on the car inventory of Phillips Bros. Automoville as a car for sale during the entire period. There is also in the record evidence that the price of the automobile was carried as an account receivable on the books at Phillips Bros. Automoville.

On the evening of June 7, 1961, Heck-stall was not working because he had earlier injured his leg. Tench Phillips was out of the state and Connolly Phillips was likewise absent from the place of employment. Robert Womack, as a company salesman, was at the Little Creek Road office used car lot. Between five-thirty to six o’clock p. m. Heckstall went to the Little Creek lot and asked Mr. Womack for the use of dealer license plates for the Pontiac automobile. From the testimony of Heckstall, it appears that the transaction concerning the borrowing of these dealer license plates was as follows:

Q. You asked him to loan you the tags to use on your car?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. What did he do ?
A. Pointed on the floor to the tags.
(The record at another point indicates that Womack at the time of this inquiry was preoccupied, talking with a customer.)
Q. Tags laying on the floor right by him?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. You picked them up and went out with them?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. You took them home, right, and put them on the 1947 Pontiac automobile the same day, June 17?
A. I don’t quite remember that, sir.
Q. Well, do you recall having this accident ?
A. Yes, sir, I remember that.
Q. The tag was on the car ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. At the time of the accident?
A. Yes, sir.

On the same evening, June 17, 1961, Heckstall took the Pontiac automobile out on the highway, ran off the road and struck Bewayne Jones, a fourteen year old boy.

Heckstall, at the time of the accident with Bewayne Jones, was an employee of Phillips Bros. Automoville, and the automobile which he was driving was titled in the name of Phillips Bros., and had Phillips Bros, dealer’s tags on it. There is no contention, by any of the parties herein, that Heckstall was acting *630 within the scope of his employment at the time of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
363 F.2d 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardware-mutual-casualty-company-v-bewayne-jones-infant-and-louis-jones-ca4-1966.