Meade v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

68 Mo. App. 92, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 496
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 68 Mo. App. 92 (Meade v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meade v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co., 68 Mo. App. 92, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 496 (Mo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries. The facts of this case, shortly stated, are about these: The plaintiff, about 8 o’clock of the night he received the injuries which he made the basis of this action, went into the waiting room of the defendant’s station at Altamont, where he lay down on a bench and went to sleep. About midnight, he suddenly awoke, finding his legs and feet on fire. After the fire had.been extinguished, one Keating, who was the defendant’s station agent and night operator in charge of the station, was standing near the plaintiff and on plaintiff inquiring, “Who done it-1?” Keating said, “he did, to scare me (plaintiff) out of the depot,” and, “that the superintendent told him not to allow any bums around there.” The undisputed evidence was further to the effect that while the plaintiff was asleep, Keating took a bottle of benzine, and poured the contents on the bench on which the plaintiff was sleeping. As to whether Keating set fire to the oil or whether it was done by another, the evidence was conflicting.

Keating testified that he intended to set fire to the benzine, but that someone else did it. He stated that if the benzine got on the plaintiff’s legs (about which there is no dispute) “it must have run on his legs.” He further testified that his purpose in pouring the benzine on the bench was to have some fun with the plaintiff.

The plaintiff was badly injured. He was disabled for several weeks and suffered much pain in consequence of the injuries he received. There was a trial, which resulted in judgment for the plaintiff and defendant has appealed.

[97]*97The defendant objects that the trial court erred in giving the first instruction for the plaintiff, which, declared that if Keating was the agent of defendant, and in charge of its depot or station at Altamont, Missouri, as station agent or night operator, and that said Keating did, while so in charge of said station, and in the performance of his duties as such agent, unlawfully assault and injure plaintiff by then and there pouring oil or benzine upon and over his foot and leg, whereby the same was burned and injured, they would find for plaintiff, etc.

And in further giving the plaintiff’s third, which declared: ’‘that although they may believe from the evidence that the said Keating did not set fire to said benzine, yet if they further believe from the evidence that he poured the same on plaintiff for the purpose of having someone else set it on fire, and that said person did set fire to the same,” to find for plaintiff, etc.

If the defendant’s agent, while in charge of said station and in the performance of his duties as such station agent, poured benzine upon the legs and feet of the plaintiff, or poured the same on the bench on which plaintiff was sleeping, whereby the clothing on his legs and feet became saturated therewith and the plaintiff’s legs and feet were burned in consequence thereof, it is immaterial whether defendant’s station agent set fire to the benzine himself, or whether it was done by another, for, in either case, the defendant is liable for the injuries resulting to the plaintiff by the wrongful act of its agent.

master and sewmás:t¿fscope°of employment. The rule now well settled in this state is that the mere - fact that the tortious act is committed by the servant, while he is actually employed in the performance of the service he has been employed to render, can not make the master liable. It must not only be done while so [98]*98employed, but it must pertain to the particular duties of that employment. Hartman v. Muehlbach, 64 Mo. App. 565; Canfield v. Railroad, 59 Mo. App. 354; Ridge v. Transfer Co., 56 Mo. App. 133; Jones v. Railroad, 43 Mo. App. 398; Farter v. Railroad, 32 Mo. App. 383; Snyder v. Railroad, 60 Mo. App. 419; Cousins v. Railroad, 66 Mo. 572; Sherman v. Railroad, 72 Mo. 63; Springer v. Railroad, 96 Mo. 299; Garitzen v. Duenckel, 50 Mo. 104; Boogher v. Life Ass'n, 75 Mo. 319.

Railroads: ant: station *?Sm>in3uiy to In Wood on Master and Servant, section 307,' it is stated that: “By putting the servant in his place he becomes responsible for all his acts within the lme of his employment, even though they are willful and directly antagonistical to his orders. The simplest test is whether they were acts within the scope of his employment, not whether they were done while prosecuting the master’s business, but whether they were done by the servant in furtherance thereof and were such as may be fairly said to have been authorized by him. By authorized is not meant authority expressly conferred, but whether the act was such as was incident to the performance of the duties intrusted to him by the master, even though in opposition to his orders.”

In Haehl v. Railroad, 119 Mo. loc. cit. 339, it is said: “The principle of respondeat superior applies only where what is complained of was done in the course of the employment. The principal is responsible, not because the servant has acted in his name or under color of his employment, but because the servant was actually engaged in and about his business and carrying out his purposes. He is then responsible because the thing complained of, although the agency of another, was done by himself; and it matters not whether the injury with which it is sought to charge [99]*99him is the result of negligence, unskillful or wrongful conduct, for he must choose fit agents for the transaction of his business. But if the business is done, or is taking care of itself, and his servant not being engaged in it, not concerned about it, but impelled by motives that are wholly personal to himself and simply to gratify his own feelings of resentment, whether provoked or unprovoked, commits an assault upon another, when that has and can have no tendency to promote any purpose in which the principal is interested, and to promote which the servant was employed, then the wrong is purely the personal wrong of the servant, for which he and he alone is responsible.”

It was the manner which was adopted by the defendant’s station agent in performing a duty of his employment which occasioned the plaintiff’s injury. The instructions told the jury, in effect, that if the defendant’s station agent, in the performance of a duty of his employment, committed the wrong on plaintiff, the defendant was liable for same, and this, it seems to us, accords with the rule declared by the authorities to' which we have referred.

[100]*100trespass:princiSmhorityf6”'’ [99]*99But the defendant contends that the plaintiff’s said instruction is erroneous in that it authorized the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff, even though they believed from the evidence that the defendant’s station agent did not set fire to the benzine, or cause it to be done, or know that it was done by another. It is a sufficient answer to this contention to say that the defendant’s station agent poured the benzine on plaintiff’s legs and feet, or at least poured it where it ran upon his legs and feet, which is, so far as plaintiff was concerned, the same thing, with an intention to set fire to it himself, and whether he applied the burning match, or someone else did so, can avail defendant nothing against the claim of the plaintiff. It may be [100]

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Bluebook (online)
68 Mo. App. 92, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meade-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-moctapp-1896.