Jenkins v. Spitler

199 S.E. 368, 120 W. Va. 514, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 123
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1938
Docket8708
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 199 S.E. 368 (Jenkins v. Spitler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Spitler, 199 S.E. 368, 120 W. Va. 514, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 123 (W. Va. 1938).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

The plaintiff, Helen M. Jenkins^, brought this action at law in the Circuit Court of Greenbrier County against E. Paul Spitler, Otis Perry, and Herbert M. Campbell and Howard B. Campbell, trading and doing business as Campbell Brothers, to recover damages for alleged personal injuries caused by a collision between the automo *516 bile in which she was riding and the automobile owned by the defendants, Campbell Brothers, driven by the defendant, Otis Perry, in which the other defendant, Spit-ler, was riding. Spitler did not appear. Judgment was entered on a jury verdict against the two Campbells, trading and doing business as aforesaid, and Otis Perry. Campbell Brothers prosecute error.

The Campbells, as partners, were engaged in the automobile business in Nicholas County. Spitler, manager of one of their garages, with general authority to sell their cars, was loaned a used car to visit his sick wife at Staunton, Virginia. H. M. Campbell, at Spitler’s request, gave the latter a specific sales price on the car, if, while on the trip, he “should happen to get a chance to sell” it; and H. B. Campbell, the other partner, helped Spitler fasten on the car dealer’s license plates, and also handed to him a small package to be delivered several miles beyond Staunton. At the time the license plates were attached to the car, H. B. Campbell, according to the uncontradicted evidence of one witness, told Spitler “the brakes weren’t very good, but maybe he could get by.” Spitler drove the car to Richwood, West Virginia, where he induced Perry to join him on the trip. The latter drove to a point on the Midland Trail about sixty miles away where the loaned car collided with a car occupied by plaintiff and her husband, the latter driving. Perry attributed the collision to “bad” brakes, though he testified that he had tightened them after starting and “they held pretty well.”

Plaintiff contends that the fact that Spitler was given express authority to sell the car on the trip and was charged with the delivery of a package for H. B. Campbell beyond Staunton caused the trip to come within the scope of Spitler’s employment and made the Campbells responsible under the doctrine of respondeat superior. We do not agree that the case of Cochran v. Michaels, 110 W. Va. 127, 157 S. E. 173, cited as supporting this contention, is in point. There, the owner’s primary purpose in permitting his employee to operate the car was for *517 the latter to sell it, and his use of it for another purpose was merely incidental. Here, according to H. B. Campbell, the primary purpose in permitting Spitler to drive the car was for the latter to use it for1 his own purpose in visiting his sick wife. His power to sell it, while so driving it, was incidental. The fact that an employer derives incidental benefits from the use of his car by an employee does not impose liability on him for his employee’s negligence. Meyn v. Dulaney-Miller Auto Company, 118 W. Va. 545, 191 S. E. 558, and cases cited therein; 5 Am. Juris., Automobiles, section 380. The delivery of the package, if made, would have been another incident. In such cases, only the primary purpose for the use of the car should control. In the Meyn case, this court said: “Ordinarily, the owner of an automobile is not liable for injuries caused by a servant, while operating the car on his own business or pleasure, though the servant had the owner’s consent. * * * This was Scanlon’s (the servant’s) exact situation when he went to the Shriners’ picnic * * * . The fact that he had a right to sell the automobile at the picnic, and while there, was incidentally advertising the company’s business, did not bring him within the scope of his employment. He was on a ‘frolic of his own’.” The use of the dealer’s license on the car, when, under Code, 17-6-13, that was admissible only if the car was being operated for sale or demonstration, did not ipso facto define the purpose of Spit-ler’s trip.

The parties stipulated in the record that the automobile was Campbell Brothers’ property, and both Perry and Spitler were their employees. The effect of this stipulation is simply to create a rebuttable presumption that Spitler and Perry were acting within the scope of their employment. Meyn v. Dulaney-Miller Auto Company, supra; Ercole v. Daniel, 105 W. Va. 118, 141 S. E. 631; Jones v. Cook, 90 W. Va. 710, 111 S. E. 828; Shahan v. Jones, 115 W. Va. 749, 177 S. E. 774; 5 Am. Juris., 711, 844, sections 373, 615; Note 74 A. L. R. 944. This rebut-table presumption “is not evidence of a fact, but purely *518 a conclusion, having no probative force, and designed only to sustain the burden of proof until evidence is introduced tending to overcome it.” 1 Jones, Commentaries (2d Ed.), 59, section 30. See also, Buskirk v. State-Planters Bank & Trust Co., 113 W. Va. 764, 767, 169 S. E. 738; Mack Realty Company v. Beckley Hardware & Supply Company, 107 W. Va. 290, 296, 148 S. E. 122; Dwight v. Hazlett, 107 W. Va. 192, 200-1, 147 S. E. 877, 66 A. L. R. 102; Wigmore on Evidence (2d Ed.), sec. 2491; Moore on Facts, sec. 545; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence (16th Ed.), sec. 14y; Thayer on Evidence, pp. 575-6; Ency. of Evidence, Presumptions, sec. 6; 22 C. J., Evidence, sec. 88; and Annotation 95 A. L. R. 880. It does not shift the burden of proof. With the introduction of evidence it loses entirely its legal force. Only the facts which gave rise to it remain to be considered by the jury, along with the other evidence. And taking the facts of the stipulation as true, together with the other evidence relied upon to establish the application of the doctrine of respondeat superior, plaintiff has failed to make a case sufficiently strong to support a jury verdict on this theory.

Error is assigned to the giving of plaintiff’s instructions, and particularly, to Instruction No. 6. The latter erroneously defines the effect of the presumption growing out of the stipulation between the parties. However, suffice to say that the sole objection of record to this instruction is that it does not correctly state the law. This objection is not sufficiently specific under Rule VI (e) of the Rules of Practice and Procedure promulgated by this Court. 116 W. Va. lxiii; Saunders v. McCown, 120 W. Va. 294, 198 S. E. 520; Hale v. McGinley, 119 W. Va. 565, 195 S. E. 201.

Campbell Brothers’ liability is further asserted on the ground that the collision was caused by defective brakes. A,s heretofore suggested, there is evidence to the effect that the brakes were defective and at least one of the parties knew of the defect. This theory does not involve the relation of master and servant. If it was properly *519

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.E. 368, 120 W. Va. 514, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-spitler-wva-1938.