Klotsch v. P. F. Collier & Son Corp.

159 S.W.2d 589, 349 Mo. 40, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 471
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 159 S.W.2d 589 (Klotsch v. P. F. Collier & Son Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klotsch v. P. F. Collier & Son Corp., 159 S.W.2d 589, 349 Mo. 40, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 471 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Respondent, Klotsch, recovered a judgment against appellants in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis for $9,601.94 damages for personal injuries sustained when he was struck by an automobile driven by appellant McAtee, an employee of appellant P.F. Collier Son Corporation (hereinafter called "Colliers"), on Saturday evening, November 5, 1938, about 7 P.M., while walking across Olive Street Road in St. Louis County. McAtee was employed by Colliers as a collector of subscriptions to their publications, and to verify new subscriptions. The place where the collision occurred was in his territory. Respondent called him as a witness and he testified he had finished his week's work on the afternoon of that day, and was on a personal mission of his own at the time of the casualty. The only two assignments of error on this appeal are: (1) *Page 44 that there was no substantial evidence to support a verdict against Colliers because it conclusively appeared McAtee was not acting in the scope of his employment when the collision occurred; (2) the verdict was excessive.

Respondent's case was submitted to the jury solely on the humanitarian doctrine. But since neither appellant contends the evidence failed to make a prima facie case of liability against appellant McAtee, and the only question is whether appellant Colliers was liable for McAtee's negligence under the doctrine ofrespondeat superior, we need not detail the circumstances of the casualty. It is necessary, however, to state fully the facts bearing on the terms of McAtee's employment and the nature of his mission when the casualty happened.

He had worked as a collector for Colliers for about three years. His compensation under the contract in effect at the time was derived wholly from commissions on collections and stipulated sums for subscriptions verified. He had a territory in the western portion of St. Louis County which included the point where the collision occurred and extended over into St. Charles County as far as Wentzville, St. Charles and intermediate villages. He had a traveling expense allowance of 3c per mile between certain towns, in which he worked, and 75c ferry fare across the Missouri River at St. Charles. When he was employed he was asked whether he had an automobile and was told an automobile would be helpful in his work. The advertisement answered by him when he obtained the job so stated. He was further required to furnish Colliers with a full description of his automobile. But he was not required to use one in the business and could have traveled by bus or other conveyances, and still drawn the same travel allowance.

On the first of each month Colliers would give him from 700 to 900 subscription contracts on which he was expected to make collections or verifications during that month. But he arranged his own routes and fixed his own working hours. He reported to the central office by telephone every morning and personally called at the office each Saturday morning at 8 o'clock for instructions. He often made collections at night. He would send in a report almost every day and would mail remittances by money order. His list included five subscribers on the Olive Street Road and he had had 9 or 10 accounts in Wentzville for three or four months. It had been his custom to make collections on these about once a month, usually between the 5th and 7th of the month.

McAtee, testifying as a witness for respondent, said he worked in St. Louis County the day of the casualty and completed his collecting about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Then he went home and made out his report for the day and mailed it. He and his wife had arranged to spend the week end with her parents at the latter's home near *Page 45 Wright City in Warren County about 13 miles west of Wentzville, both cities being on U.S. Highway No. 40. [592] About 6 o'clock that evening they started to Wright City in his automobile, going over the Olive Street Road, which was the most practical route to both Wentzville and Wright City because the alternate route through St. Charles entailed payment of the ferry fare. But McAtee swore he had no intention of transacting any business for Colliers at Wentzville or elsewhere on that going trip. However he did intend, after having spent the week end at Wright City, to return to Wentzville the next Monday morning (more than 36 hours in the future) and begin work there. For that reason he took with him all lists and records necessary to transact his business at Wentzville, St. Peters and St. Charles. It may have been that he had all the cards and contracts upon which collections or verifications were to be made that month. The witness' testimony is confused on that point.

After the collision he was taken to the sheriff's office and released about 10 o'clock or 11 o'clock that night. He proceeded to Wright City and remained with his wife's family, as planned, until Monday morning, November 7, when he began work at Wentzville about 12:35 P.M. He waited until that hour because it had been raining. From there he went on to St. Peters and St. Charles and returned home Monday night. In his report for Monday, November 7, he claimed mileage on the going trip of November 5, as far as Wentzville, from the last allowable point he had visited the previous week, and also on the return trip from Wentzville.

One of respondent's counsel obtained a written statement from McAtee on November 8, three days after the casualty, in which the following appears: "At the time I was proceeding out to Wright City, Mo., where my wife's family reside. We intended to spend the night there and then I expected to do some collecting in the vicinity, which I have done at this time. I have to provide my own car on my job. . . ." McAtee further testified at the trial that he didn't call on customers on Sunday, whereupon respondent introduced two exhibits purporting to show he had taken two 60c subscriptions at Wentzville on October 9, which was Sunday, about a month previous to the date of the casualty. The witness said he thought the "9" in the dates had been changed and that the numbers of those two subscriptions appeared on his daily report for October 7, 1938, though he usually dated such reports the day the subscription was actually taken.

Harry Werner, another witness for respondent had worked for Colliers from July, 1935, to May, 1938. He said he was required to use an automobile, as were the 15 to 18 other collectors, except one who worked in St. Louis; that the company's instructions were to start work early in the morning; and to work in the evening and even on Sunday if necessary. Once he was asked to work on July 4. He *Page 46 further said if the collectors were in St. Louis (for conferences, as we understand) the company usually instructed them to leave Sunday so as to be in their territories Monday to begin work. This witness had a territory more remote from St. Louis than McAtee's. He had worked some in St. Louis, but also in Southern Illinois, Iowa and in Missouri as far away as Jefferson City, Columbia and Boonville. We do not understand him to mean that the company required a man to start out on Sunday if his territory was close to St. Louis. He said nothing about that. McAtee lived in St. Louis, and we take judicial notice that Wentzville is about 35 or 40 miles from that city, depending on the destination therein.

Respondent cites nine cases of which Borgestede v. Waldbauer,337 Mo. 1205, 1209-10, 88 S.W.2d 373, 374, and Brunk v. Hamilton-Brown Shoe Co., 334 Mo. 517, 528(3),

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159 S.W.2d 589, 349 Mo. 40, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klotsch-v-p-f-collier-son-corp-mo-1942.