Moreman v. Armour & Co.

65 S.W.2d 334
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1933
DocketNo. 4094.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 334 (Moreman v. Armour & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moreman v. Armour & Co., 65 S.W.2d 334 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

J. M. Moreman and wife sued Armour & Co., a corporation, and the members of three partnerships known as Davis & Humphries, South Plains Transfer & Storage Company, and the Lubbock Hardware & Supply Company, to recover damages on account of the death of plaintiffs’ son, who it is alleged was killed by W. Nelson Guthrie, a night watchman and special officer in the employment of the defendants.

The salient facts are that on the night of November 11, 1932, a number of young people living in the vicinity of Abernathy, in Stale county, came to Lubbock in an automobile driven by Colver Moreman, the seventeen-year old son of the plaintiffs below, appellants here. After arriving in Lubbock, the occupants of the car disagreed as to whether they should attend a dance or a picture show, and while driving around town in an effort to settle the dispute, the car was driven by Colver Moreman into an alley near the warehouse of Davis & Humphries. Members of the party left the car for a few minutes and upon their return the car was backed out of the alley and started forward on Ninth street. About the time the ear commenced to back out of the alley, Guthrie appeared at the opposite end of the alley and, seeing the car, thought that the occupants of the car-had been depredating, or were about to depre-date, upon the property of one of his employers, Davis & Humphries.- He ran toward the car, shouting, as he says, to the occupants to stop. Upon their failure to do so, he drew his pistol, according to his account, and fired as a warning to the occupants of the car to-stop them in order that he might investigate and learn their purpose in being in the alley. The bullet struck the Moreman boy in the left temple and resulted in his death a few hours thereafter.

With reference to Davis & Humphries’ employment of Guthrie, the plaintiffs alleged: “That on or about the 5th day of November, A. D., 1932, the defendants J. M. Davis and W. E. Humphries, doing business as Davis & Humphries, and acting by and through W. E., Humphries, one of said partners, for the benefit of the partnership business, and also acting by and through one Olen Stewart, the manager and duly authorized agent of the said Davis & Humphries, in the conduct of their partnership business, who was acting in the scope, of his authority as such, and' for the benefit of the partnership business, employed the said W. Nelson Guthrie in the capacity *335 of night watchman and special officer, which employment continued up to and including the night of November 11, 1932, and that the said W. Nelson Guthrie, at the time he fired the shot that resulted in the death of Colver Moreman, as hereinafter set out, was acting in the scope of his employment by the said J. M. Davis and W. E. Humphries, doing business as Davis & Humphries, and as an employee and agent of said defendants, and for their benefit, and in the capacity for which he was employed by them.”

The plaintiffs made similar allegations with reference to the employment of Guthrie by the other defendants, and further alleged that Guthrie was employed by all of the defendants jointly and severally to act as night watchman and special officer on the premises of said several defendants; that said defendants and their agents knew of the fact that Guthrie was so employed by the other defendants ; that as such watchman and special officer it was the duty of Guthrie to watch the premises of the defendants, which were all within the corporate limits of the city of Lubbock, and to arrest and detain marauders who might be depredating upon the property of either of the defendants and to prevent persons from depredating thereon. That the said Guthrie in the performance of his duties as such night watchman on the premises of either of the defendants, or in going from the premises of one to the premises of another, was acting within the scope of his employment and as the employee and agent of each and all of the defendants. That each of the defendants paid and agreed to pay Guthrie a salary or wages for his services to them as suph night watchman and special officer.

That on said night of November 11,1932, at about 10 o’clock, the deceased, Colver More-man, , on a lawful mission and accompanied by a number of other young people, drove an automobile into and upon the public alley between Ninth and Tenth streets and between Avenues G and E in said city, then backed said car out of the alley into Ninth street, and started driving west. That said alley into which the ear was driven and said Ninth street at said point was immediately adjacent to the warehouse of Davis & Humphries, which it was the duty of Guthrie to watch. That acting within the scope of his authority as an employee and agent of the defendants and each of them, Guthrie unlawfully, recklessly, negligently, and carelessly, and in gross and wanton disregard of the rights of the occupants of the car, drew a pistol and fired into the automobile which at that time was situated on Ninth street. That the bullet struck Colver Moreman, piercing his brain, from the effects of which he died about 2 o’clock on the morning of November 12th. That W. Nelson Guthrie is actually and notoriously insolvent, for which reason he is not made a party to this suit. That Guthrie, at the time of his employment, was an unfit person to perform the duties of night watchman and special officer because he was negligent and careless, and of a nervous disposition, was easily excited, and prone to act upon impulse and without proper investigation and in disregard of human life, all of which facts were known to the defendants at the time they employed the said Guthrie, or could have been known by the exercise ’Of ordinary prudence.

The defendants Armour & Co., Lubbock Hardware & Supply Company, and South Plains Transfer & Storage Company filed separate answers, each alleging that their employment of Guthrie was not a joint hiring; that each employed him to protect the property of the several defendants separately. That he was not acting as a night watchman employed by them, but as a policeman of the city of Lubbock, and that the killing was. not done in the course of his employment by the defendants, but in the course of his employment by Davis & Humphries and for the protection of the property of Davis & Humphries, and they further allege that Guthrie was an independent contractor.

Davis & Humphries answered by general demurrer, general denial, specially denied that they or any one by their authority ever, employed Guthrie to do any kind of work for them, that he was never their employee, and, in fact, operated as an independent contractor. They further alleged that Colver More-man was guilty of contributory negligence in going to the part of the town where he was found at the time of the killing. Each of the other defendants adopted the plea of contributory negligence set up by Davis & Humphries.

The case was tried to a jury, and after appellants had closed' in the introduction of their testimony in chief, appellees moved the court for an instructed verdict, which motion was granted and judgment was entered accordingly.

Davis & Humphries moved the court for a peremptory instruction in their favor because, as set out in the motion: “Plaintiffs have wholly failed to make out any case or issue of liabilities as against the defendants, because the proof shows as a matter of law that W.

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65 S.W.2d 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moreman-v-armour-co-texapp-1933.