Kavis v. Schimmel

13 N.E.2d 565, 213 Ind. 514
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1938
DocketNo. 26,996.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 N.E.2d 565 (Kavis v. Schimmel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kavis v. Schimmel, 13 N.E.2d 565, 213 Ind. 514 (Ind. 1938).

Opinion

Fansler, J.

The appellant brought this action against the appellees seeking damages for injuries received in a collision between a car driven by the appellant and a gasoline truck driven by the appellee Schimmel. There was judgment for the defendants.

The appellant assigns error upon the overruling of her motion for a new trial. The only cause presented is the giving of a certain instruction.

It appears that, prior to the commencement of the instant action, the appellant brought suit in the superior court of Cook County, Illinois, against the Pure Oil Company, Incorporated, and the Eclipse Oil & Refining Company, Incorporated. The Pure Oil Company, In *515 corporated, appeared to the action and specifically denied the allegations of the bill and specifically denied ownership of or agency in the operation of the motor-truck. The cause was submitted to a jury, which returned a general verdict for the defendant, and a special verdict as follows: “Do you find from the evidence in this case and under the instructions -of the court that the plaintiff, Mary Kavis, was guilty of any negligence which proximately contributed to the accident and injury at the time and place in question?” This was answered “Yes” by the jury. There was judgment for the defendant in that case.

There is little dispute about the facts. The appellant in her car and the appellee Sehimmel in his truck were approaching each other upon a highway in the state of Michigan. The road was straight and level and there were no obstructions. The appellant drove for a considerable distance on the left side of the road, seeking unsuccessfully to pass a car in front of her. She testified that she was looking at the truck from the time it was a mile or a mile and a half ahead of her until the time of the collision; that she had tried to pass the car ahead of her two or three times before the collision; that, when she got over to the left side of the road (the last time presumably), she started to pay attention to the truck; that it was about 150 feet away, coming toward her. She saw that the truck was not slowing down and that there was going to be an accident. She pulled across the left driveway on to the left side of the road. The truck driver pulled to his right, and the cars collided at the side of the roadway. The appellant and another witness testified that the driver jumped out of the truck before the collision. He testified that he crawled out through the windshield after- the collision; that his clothing caught fire; and that he rolled over in the grass to extinguish the fire.

*516 In the case in Illinois, the plaintiff relied upon proof of the identical collision and the identical acts of the defendant Schimmel that were relied upon in the case at bar as constituting negligence. The relationship of the various corporations involved in the two actions is not disclosed, but in the Illinois case, the Pure Oil Company, Incorporated, was charged with responsibility for the operation of the truck; and the acts of Schimmel, who is a party to this action, were put in evidence. The defendant, Pure Oil Company, Incorporated, in that case asked for a peremptory instruction in its favor, which was denied, so there must have been some evidence that the Pure Oil Company, Incorporated, bore such a relationship to Schimmel and the truck he was driving as to make it liable to respond in damages if the truck was negligently operated.

The question of the appellant’s contributory negligence was in issue in the Illinois case, and that question was submitted to the jury, and it was decided by the jury that the appellant was guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to the injury. The appellees, by proper answer, set up the Illinois judgment as a defense.

By the instruction complained of, the court told the jury that, if they found, from the evidence that the facts involved in the accident, alleged in the appellant’s complaint, and the acts of negligence alleged, and the injuries alleged to have been sustained, were identical with those alleged in the action in Cook County; and if they further found from the evidence that the parties in the cause of action in Cook County “are the same parties involved in this cause of action now on trial, or the parties in the Chicago case are in privity with the parties in the present action”; and if they found the special verdict above referred to was found by the jury in the Illinois case, their verdict should be for the de *517 fendants. The appellant complains that, by this instruction, the court permitted the jury to determine the legal effect of the judgment in the Illinois case, but we think this objection is of no importance.

Appellant contends that, before there can be an estoppel by verdict, the parties to the actions must be identical, or it must be shown that there is privity existing between the parties.

The negligence relied upon consisted in acts of the driver of the truck, the appellee Sehimmel. The evidence discloses that the truck belonged to him. The corporations named in the actions committed no torts, but it was sought to make them responsible because of a relationship of principal and agent or master and servant under the respondeat superior doctrine.

It is generally said that one may not have an estoppel by judgment or verdict unless he would be estopped had the judgment or verdict been the other way. But whether there is privity between a master and servant or principal and agent, and whether an agent or servant is bound by a judgment against his principal or master respecting his acts charged to be negligent, we need not inquire. There seems to be a well-settled exception to the rule of privity and mutuality in cases where several different persons may be responsible for the actions of one. These cases generally arise out of the relationship of master and servant or principal and agent. In Emery v. Fowler (1855), 39 Maine, 326, 329, the action was trespass quare clausum against a son who had acted under the direction of his father. In a prior action against the father for the same act, the father was acquitted, although he admitted that the son acted under his direction. It was held that the son was entitled to the benefit of the adjudication; that: “To permit a person to commence an action against the principal and to prove the acts alleged to be trespasses, to have been *518 committed by his servant acting by his order, and to fail upon the merits to recover, and subsequently to commence an action against that servant and to prove and rely upon the same acts as a trespass, is to allow him to have two trials for the same cause of action, to be proved by the same testimony. In such cases the technical rule, that a judgment can only be admitted between the parties to the record or their privies, expands so far as to admit it, when the same question has been decided and judgment rendered between parties responsible for the acts of others.” It is true that, in most of the cases that have come to our attention, the first action was brought against the immediate actor in the wrongdoing, and a judgment in his favor was held to protect his principal or his master. But the principle involved is the same. In Portland Gold Mining Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.E.2d 565, 213 Ind. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kavis-v-schimmel-ind-1938.