Hobba v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.

141 P.2d 648, 19 Wash. 2d 102
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1943
DocketNo. 28972.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 141 P.2d 648 (Hobba v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hobba v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 141 P.2d 648, 19 Wash. 2d 102 (Wash. 1943).

Opinion

Grady, J.

J. — This action was brought by R. C. Hobba and wife against the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company, a corporation, to recover damages .for injuries sustained by Mrs. Hobba as the result of a collision with two messenger boys in the employ of defendant, who, while in the performance of their duties, negligently ran into her. A trial before' the court and a jury resulted in a verdict for the defendant. The court granted the motion of plaintiffs for a new trial, from which order the defendant has taken this appeal.

Mrs. Hobba will hereinafter be referred to as though she were the sole respondent.

The answer of the appellant denied the material allegations of the complaint, and alleged affirmatively that, if respondent was injured by the messengers’ colliding with her, such injury was caused by their independent acts, which were not within the scope of their employment with appellant. There is also a plea of contributory negligence on the part of respondent, but there is no question on that subject before the court in this appeal. The affirmative matter of the answer was denied by respondent’s reply.

The appellant assigns as error the denial by the court of its motion for nonsuit, made at the close of respondent’s evidence. The appellant did not stand on its motion, but submitted evidence in its own behalf, and, therefore, the whole record is now before us for review. Alkire v. Myers Lbr. Co., 57 Wash. 300, 106 Pac. 915; Olsen v. Peerless Laundry, 111 Wash. 660, 191 Pac. 756.

By its second and third assignments of error, the appellant contends that the court erred in granting the motion of respondent for a new trial, denying its motion for a directed verdict, and in vacating the verdict of the jury.

The order granting the motion for a new trial was *104 general and did not specify the ground or grounds upon which it was based. Our inquiry can go no further than to determine- whether the evidence was sufficient to take the case to the jury. Morehouse v. Everett, 136 Wash. 112, 238 Pac. 897; Wood v. Hallenbarter, 12 Wn. (2d) 576, 112 P. (2d) 798; Rambo v. Puget Sound Navigation Co., 12 Wn. (2d) 637, 123 P. (2d) 355.

The evidence upon which the parties base their respective claims of liability and nonliability is conflicting. But, in determining whether there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury and upon which a verdict for the respondent might rest, we must take that evidence most favorable to the respondent, with all the reasonable and proper inferences that may be drawn therefrom; and if, when this is done, it can be said that a verdict for the respondent would have been justified, then the court was not in error in denying the motion for a directed verdict. The factual situation most favorable to respondent is substantially as follows:

The appellant had in- its employ two messenger boys, Eugene Allison and Zene Whipple. At the time of the injury to respondent, both boys were dressed in uniforms supplied by appellant. About four o’clock in the afternoon of the day in question, Whipple returned from a trip he had made with another messenger, and he was standing on the public sidewalk in front of appellant’s telegraph office on the east side of Howard street, in the city of Spokane. At that time, Allison came out of the office, charged with the duty of going on foot on an errand which would take him to the place of business of the Spokane Chronicle and from there to the store of the J. C. Penney Company, on Riverside avenue. The ordinary and usual route of travel by foot would be to go south from the telegraph office to Sprague avenue and either cross Howard at its intersection with Sprague, or continue south and cross Sprague, and thence west.

When Allison came out of the telegraph office, he stopped in front of Whipple, and, in a friendly manner, struck him *105 on the chest, and then ran south along the sidewalk towards Sprague. Whipple followed in pursuit. Meanwhile, respondent and a woman companion were traveling east and crossing Howard along the north side of Sprague, with the intention of taking passage on a bus at the northeast corner of the intersection of these streets. As respondent stepped from the street to the sidewalk, she was slightly in advance of her companion. The boys were then advancing, both running, and Whipple had seized Allison by either the shoulders, or neck. Both of the boys, while in this position, negligently and violently collided with respondent, causing her to fall, from which she sustained severe injuries.

Much of the foregoing was'in dispute at the trial, but it is with this version of the case we must approach the legal questions involved. We must also indulge in the assumption that Allison, at the time of the accident, was on his way to the Chronicle building in the performance of the duties assigned him by the appellant. This factual situation presents the question for decision, which is well-stated by appellant in its brief as follows:

“If we assume now — merely for the sake of this argument — that the Telegraph Company was employing Whipple at the time to deliver messages and that at the time of the accident, both he and Allison were actually delivering undelivered messages for the Telegraph Company, and further that they had not diverted from their duties but were simply pursuing their course along the street, is the Telegraph Company liable for the boys walking or running along in such a careless manner as to run into and injure another pedestrian?”

We are not concerned with those cases in which the messenger boy was riding a horse or a bicycle or driving an automobile in the performance of his work for his employer, nor those cases in which, by reason of the shortness of time allotted by the employer for the act of delivering a message, the employer required extra haste of the messenger and an injury resulted to a third party, but are limiting our decision to a case where the means of locomotion was *106 by foot and in such a manner as the messenger himself might choose.

We have not been cited to any decision of this court involving the negligence of an employee traveling on foot, nor, after much search, have we been able to find one. The appellant has cited the following cases dealing with locomotion on foot: Phillips v. Western Union Tel. Co., 270 Mo. 676, 195 S. W. 711, L. R. A. 1917F, 489; Ritchey v. Western Union Tel. Co., 227 Mo. App. 754, 41 S. W. (2d) 628; Wesolowski v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., 308 Pa. 117, 162 Atl. 166, 87 A. L. R. 783.

The first two of these cases deal with the negligence of an employee while traveling on foot. In the Phillips case, the court reasoned that the messenger boy, who, while traveling on the public street, negligently collided with a pedestrian, was not there by permission of his employer, but in the exercise of his right as a member of the public and which right went with his services only so far as it was necessary to the performance of the duty involved, and that it would be carrying the doctrine of respondeat superior

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Bluebook (online)
141 P.2d 648, 19 Wash. 2d 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobba-v-postal-telegraph-cable-co-wash-1943.