Pantall v. Shriver-Allison Co.

22 N.E.2d 497, 61 Ohio App. 119, 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 540, 14 Ohio Op. 178, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 256
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 N.E.2d 497 (Pantall v. Shriver-Allison Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pantall v. Shriver-Allison Co., 22 N.E.2d 497, 61 Ohio App. 119, 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 540, 14 Ohio Op. 178, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 256 (Ohio Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OPINION

By CARTER, J•

This cause is before this court on appeal on questions of law. The action below was one in damages for personal injuries claimed to have been sustained by the plaintiff. The parties will be designated as plaintiff and defendant.

The operative facts are substantially as follows:

The defendant is on Ohio corporation *541 engaged in the undertaking business in the city of Youngstown, and licensed under the provisions of §1335-5, GC, to engage in the business of directing and supervising funerals for profit.

A man by the name of William Waddington, residing in the city of Youngstown, died, and the defendant company was employed to take charge of the body and the funeral arrangements usually incident to burial, and under the arrangement defendant was to furnish the casket, funeral services, the hearse, a car for the minister, a car for the pall bearers and a car for the family, with drivers therefor. These three cars otherwise than the hearse were the only cars to be furnished by defendant. As usual at funerals, a large number of cars were owned and driven by various friends desiring to attend the funeral which was held at the home of the deceased. It appears that the Waddington family made up a list of car owners who had volunteered the use of their cars to the family to convey relatives ordinarily designated as mourners, from the house to the place of burial, which place of burial was to be in a certain cemetery located on Belmont avenue, Youngstown. These particular cars hereinbefore mentioned, including the volunteered cars, were numbered consecutively from one to ten. The defendant, through its assistant, arranged these cars in the procession accordingly and the volunteered cal's were to follow the other three cars furnished by defendant in proceeding to the cemetery. Others proceeding to the cemetery followed these designated cars in any order they saw fit. Funeral stickers were placed on the cars by the undertaker and following the services at the Waddington home the procession formed in line to proceed to the place of burial, the assistant assisting the mourners into the three cars defendant was to furnish, and also those designated to ride in the volunteered cars. The plaintiff had come to the Waddington home as a mourner and was assisted into a car known as the Master-•son car. Masterson also attending as a mourner, driving his own car and was not assigned a number but followed among the cars not listed by the family. A man by the name of James Marsh, an acquaintance of the deceased, on the day before the the funeral, visited the Waddington home to express his sympathy to the family, and at that time offered to the family the use of his car if needed to transport moqrners from the home to the cemetery. This was brought to the attention of the undertaker, who instructed Marsh wheie to place his car in the procession, the Marsh car being assigned as car No. 10 in the procession and certain mourners or relatives were placed in the Marsh car. Stickers were placed on all cars in the procession. The undertaker drove the first car and led the procession on its way to the cemetery. The route taken was west on Madison avenue to Wick avenue, thence north on Wick avenue to Broadway, thence west on Broadway to Fifth avenue and on to the cemetery. For some reason the Marsh car became separated from the procession at or near the intersection of Madison and Wick avenue, and Marsh, instead of following the procession up Wick avenue, proceeded westerly from Madison avenue to Elm street, thence north on Elm street to the intersection of Elm and Broadway, where the collision occurred between the Marsh and Masterson cars, plaintiff being a passenger in the Masterson car at the time. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence a motion was made by defendant for a directed verdict, which motion was by the trial court sustained. From this action of the trial court appeal is prosecuted to this court.

*542 *541 Was the court in error in sustaining this motion? Was the relationship, if any, between defendant and Marsh such under the facts as above recited as to create liability on the part of the defendant under the doctrine of respondeat superior. In other words, was there a factual question presented for consideration and determination by the jury? There is no material dispute as to the facts involved. Marsh tendered the use of his car to the family and Masterson did the same. Neither of these cars were owned or operated by defendant. Defendant did not employ Marsh or Master-son to furnish or drive these cars. The contract between the Waddington family and defendant with reference to the furnishing of cars was that defendant was to furnish three cars, and no more, to transport relatives and mourners to and from the cemetery. Neither Marsh nor Masterson were to be compensated in any way financially by either the Wadding-ton family or the undertaker for the services performed. Such were entirely voluntary, not to the defendant but direct to the farhily. Though the undertaker had general charge of the funeral and had the cars placed according to their numbers and assisted and directed the mourners and relatives into these cars according to data furnished it by the family and placed a sticker on not only his three cars but ap *542 parently all other cars which were to proceed in the procession to the cemetery whether the cars carried numbers or not. Liability is urged against the defendant by reason of the fact that defendant had general charge and supervision of the funeral and that the acts on the part of the undertaker, as above enumerated, presented a factual question to be determined by the jury, and a number of cases have been cited by counsel for plaintiff in an attempt to support this contention. However, a perusal of these cases will disclose, that the facts upon which these decisions are based are not identical with the facts in the instant case. Generally the relation of master and servant exists where one person for pay or other valuable consideration enters into the service of another and devotes to him his personal labor for an agreed price. Measured by this rule, the relationship of master and servant did not exist in this case. The basis of the doctrine of respondeat superior is let the master or superior answer; that is, in certain cases the master is liable for rhe wrongful acts of his servant and a principal for -those of his agent. In the case of Braun v Averdick, 113 Oh St, 613, in the course of the opinion in that case the court say:

“The test of a master’s liability lies in proof of the fact that if the negligent act was done by a servant, it was done in the course of his master’s employment and while engaged in the service of the master.”

A servant is a person in the employ of another and subject to his control as to what work shall be done and the means by which it shall be accomplished. In the case of Gravatt v State, 25 Oh St, 162, the court say:

“When a person in the employment of another is in the discharge of his duty subject to the immediate direction and control of his employer, he is properly described as a servant.”

Marsh was not employed as a servant of the defendant, neither was he under the direction and control of defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E.2d 497, 61 Ohio App. 119, 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 540, 14 Ohio Op. 178, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pantall-v-shriver-allison-co-ohioctapp-1938.