Home Insurance Co. v. Allied Telephone Co.

442 S.W.2d 211, 246 Ark. 1095, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1348
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 26, 1969
Docket5-4897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 442 S.W.2d 211 (Home Insurance Co. v. Allied Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Insurance Co. v. Allied Telephone Co., 442 S.W.2d 211, 246 Ark. 1095, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1348 (Ark. 1969).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

Olin S. Payte sued Allied Telephone Company in the Pike County Circuit Court for property damages growing out of an automobile collision. Olin H Payte died during the pendency of the action and Home Insurance Company, who had paid the collision loss to Payte under tin insurance contract it had with him, was substituted as party plaintiff under -its subrogation agreement with Payte. A jury trial resulted in a judgment for Allied. Home Insurance has appealed and relies on the following points for reversal :

“That the Court erred in allowing the defendant to testify to self-serving, hearsay statements made by the driver of plaintiff’s motor vehicle, a bailee.
That the Court erred in refusing to give the plaintiff’s instruction on the Arkansas law pertaining to the imputation of negligence from bailee to bailor.”

The recorded facts are as follows: Johnny Payte was the son of Olin Payte, and on March 9,1967, between 9:30 and 10:00 a.m., Johnny Payte was driving an automobile registered in his father’s name north on a county road in Pike County and Johnny’s wife was riding as a passenger in the front seat with him. As he drove over a “rise” in the highway, a truck belonging to appellee and being driven by its employee, Richard Ray, was traveling south meeting the Payte automobile. According to the uncontradicted testimony of the investigating officer, the Payte vehicle skidded fifty-four feet and the appellee’s vehicle skidded ten foot, and the two vehicles collided with the point of impact being about one foot and four inches east of the center line, and on Payte’s side of the road. The traveled portion of the gravel road was sixteen feet and six inches wide at this point. The Payte automobile was damaged in the amount of $925.00. The police officer testified that appellee’s truck was over the center line of the highway and that from his investigation at the scene of the collision, he was of the opinion that the Payte automobile was traveling too fast for the conditions of the highway.

Mrs. Payte testified that as she and her husband came over a rise in the highway, the appellee’s vehicle was in the center of the road “a little on our'side.” She testified that her husband was driving about thirty miles per hour. Mrs. Payte was asked and answered questions as follows:

“Q. Where were you going at the time of the collision?
A. We liad just gotten off from school, and we were going to my mother’s — to my mother-in-law’s house.
* # #
C- Who was the registered owner of this car at the time of the collision?
A. Olin S. Payte.
Q. Who is he?
A. He’s my father-in-law.
Q. Were you on an errand for him?
A. No, sir. .
Q. You were on your own personal business?
A. Yes, sir.”

The above questions and answers by Mrs. Payte are the only evidence in the record pertaining .to the agency relationship between the owner and the driver of the automobile. If the pronoun “you” in the questions was used or understood in the singular, it shed no light at all on the agency relationship between the driver and the owner. If the question was asked and understood in the plural, the answers could have been interpreted to say that Mrs. Payte and her husband, who was driving an automobile registered in his father’s name, had just gotten off from school at 9:30 in the morning and had started to Mrs. Payte’s mother-in-law’s house on their own personal business and not on an errand for her husband’s father. Be that as it may, the whole case was tried on the theory that Johnny Payte was a permissive bailee of the automobile and there was no evidence to the contrary.

One subpoena was issued for Trooper Rex Martin. Johnny Payte and Mavis Payte. It was served on Mr. Martin and Mrs. Payte, but was not served on Johnny Payte and he did not testify at the trial. Mr. Ray, the driver of appellee’s truck, was permitted to testify as to statements made to him by Johnny Pa}de following the collision. This testimony was offered and admitted as admissions against interest and it was objected to because Johnny Payte was not a party to the lawsuit and as being self-serving if he were. What the objection actually amounted to was that it was inadmissible, as hearsay evidence. The testimony of Mr. Ray as to what Johnny Payte said to him and the objections made to it are copied from the record as follows:

“Q. T should have asked you one other question. Mr. Ray, since the accident on more than [one] occasion have you had conversation with Mr. Payte, the driver of that automobile?
mr. osterloh:
I am going to object to any conversation he had with Mr. Payte, the driver. He isn’t a party to this lawsuit and has never been.
mr. steel;
He was the driver of the car, and any admissions made against his interest, I think, are certainly admissible.
mr. osterloh;
And they are self-serving, Your Honor.
the court;
Overruled. You may answer.
Q. (Con’d, by Mr. Steel) You may answer the question that I am about to ask — what conversation you had with him as to whose fault it was.
A. "Well, right after the accident we went to the hospital, and I saw him in the hospital. He came over and asked how I was, if I was -doing all right, and he said something about it -looked like we were at the right place at the wrong time.
Q. Now, since that time, were you working along the road, and did he stop and talk to you?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. What did he tell you then?
A. I don’t remember the exact words, but it was just like, in so many words he said it wa.s something that couldn’t be helped.
mr. osterloh:
I object, Your Honor.
the court:
Yes, sir. You will have to repeat the conversation as you remember it, not what you think it was.
Q. (Con’d, by Mr. Steel) Do. you remember the exact words he used, Mr. Bay?
A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
442 S.W.2d 211, 246 Ark. 1095, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-insurance-co-v-allied-telephone-co-ark-1969.