Monk v. Jones

83 S.W.2d 526, 190 Ark. 1117, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 10, 1935
Docket4-3906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 S.W.2d 526 (Monk v. Jones) 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
Monk v. Jones, 83 S.W.2d 526, 190 Ark. 1117, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 201 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

Johnson, C. J.

This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Bradley County by appellant, J. F. Monk, as administrator of James Monk, deceased, against the Jones Furniture Company, a foreign copartnership, Hayes Jones and Gr. P. Scarborough, to compensate an-alleged injury and the resultant death of James Monk, deceased.

In effect, the complaint alleged that on April 3, 1933, James Monk, a minor of the age of seven years, while traversing a highway in front of his home was carelessly and negligently struck, run over and killed by an automobile driven by Gr. P. Scarborough, an agent and servant of the Jones Furniture Company, a foreign copartnership composed of Hayes Jones and his wife. Damages were laid at $3,000. Upon the filing of the complaint, an attachment was issued and served upon the property of the Jones Furniture Company situated in this State. The attached property was subsequently released by the execution of bond.

Hayes Jones filed a separate answer in which lie admitted that he and his wife owned and operated the Jones Furniture Company stores located at Warren and Stuttgart and that they also owned and operated a furniture warehouse located at McGehee in this State. He admitted that James Monk, deceased, was struck by a truck driven by G. P. Scarborough as alleged and died as a result thereof, but denied that G. P. Scarborough was an agent of the .Tones Furniture Company or that he managed or supervised the management of said stores or either of them; denied that Scarborough was acting within the scope of his employment or authority when the accident happened, and denied that Scarborough was driving the truck in a dangerous, reckless, unlawful or careless manner when the accident occurred. The Jones Furniture Company composed of Hayes Jones and wife filed an answer adopting the separate answer of Hayes Jones. Upon the issues thus joined, testimony was adduced upon trial to a jury, and, when considered in the light most favorable to appellant, was to the following-effect: The Jones Furniture Company is a foreign co-partnership composed of Hayes Jones and his wife, who reside in the State of Mississippi; the copartnership owns and operates furniture stores located at Warren and Stuttgart and also own and operate a furniture warehouse located at MeGehee; G. P. Scarborough was prior and subsequent to April 3, 1933, in charge of, as manager, the Warren furniture store, and Bill Scarborough, a son of G. P. Scarborough, was manager of the Stuttgart store; on April 3,1933, G. P. Scarborough was driving a small gasoline truck upon the highway which passes from Warren to Pine Bluff, and, while passing the home of appellant which was situated on the cast side of said highway, ran said truck against James Monk, a minor son of appellant, and thereby killed him; the highway which was being traversed by Scarborough at the time of the accident was straight for some distance on each side of appellant’s home; at the time said truck struck said child, G. P. Scarborough was driving at the rate of forty miles per hour, and the truck was not brought to a stop after striking the child, within sevontvfive yards; at and immediately prior to the accident there was a car parked directly in front of appellant’s home but on the west side of the highway in which other children were being admitted for passage to a school-house in that vicinity, and between the east side of the highway and the yard fence around appellant’s home there were other small children at play; the parked car and the children being admitted thereto and the children at play on the east side of the road were visible to Scarborough for quite a distance from the scene of the accident. The testimony adduced further reflected that the truck, which Avas being driven by G. P. Scarborough at the time of the accident, had a small piece of furniture in it, and that on the same day he delivered a small piece of furniture, namely, a vanity dresser to the Stuttgart store; that prior and subsequent to the accident Gr. P. Scarborough used this truck in the handling and hauling of furniture from the warehouse at MeGeliee to the Warren store and transporting furniture from the Warren store to the Stuttgart store, etc. On behalf of appellees the testimony tended to explain and contradict that produced by appellant, and in addition thereto tended to show that G. P. Scarborough was working for the Jones Furniture Company on a commission basis, furnishing his own trucks and employees, etc., and was therefore an independent contractor.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the trial court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of appellees, and this appeal comes from the judgment entered thereon.

Three questions are presented by this appeal for determination; namely, first, were the facts and circumstances presented in testimony, sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that G. P. Scarborough was negligent in the operation of the truck at the time of the accident which proximately caused the injury and resultant death of James Monk? secondly, was James Monk, deceased, guilty of such contributory negligence as to bar a recovery? third, was the relationship between G. P. Scarborough and his co-appellees that of independent contractor or that of principal and agent?

We have stated the law in reference to the duties of pedestrians and automobile drivers upon highways in this State as follows:

“Drivers of automobiles and pedestrians both have a right to the street, but the former must anticipate the presence of the latter, and exercise reasonable cam to avoid injuring them. Care mnst be exercised commensurate with the danger reasonably to be anticipated. What is ordinary care is a relative term dependent upon the facts and circumstances of each particular case.” Murphy v. Clayton, 179 Ark. 225, 15 S. W. (2d) 391.

The facts adduced in testimony were that the highway was straight for some distance in both directions from the scene of the accident, and that G. P. Scarborough by the exercise of ordinary care could and should have seen the parked car upon the west side of the highway and the children being admitted thereto for passage to school; he could and should have seen the two small children playing on the east side of the highway for quite a distance, and ordinary care should have dictated and impelled the reduction of the speed of his truck to a point of safety, but to the contrary of this view, according to the testimony, he continued to proceed at forty miles per hour until the child was struck. This testimony was amply sufficient to support a finding of negligence on G. P. Scarborough’s part, if the jury saw fit to so conclude.

Neither can a directed verdict be successfully defended upon the theory that James Monk’s contributory negligence precludes a recovery, as a matter of law. In the last cited case where a child eleven years of age was struck by a car at a public road crossing, we said: “The question of contributory negligence is one for the jury whether the pedestrian, in crossing the street at an established crossing, has exercised such care as a person of ordinary prudence would exercise for its own safety under the circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 S.W.2d 526, 190 Ark. 1117, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monk-v-jones-ark-1935.