Peters v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.

138 S.E. 595, 194 N.C. 172, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 25, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 138 S.E. 595 (Peters v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peters v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 138 S.E. 595, 194 N.C. 172, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 37 (N.C. 1927).

Opinion

CoNNob, J.

Upon its appeal to this Court defendant, the Great A. & P. Tea Company, relies chiefly upon its assignment of error based upon its exception to the refusal of the court to allow its motion for judgment as of nonsuit at the close of all the evidence. C. S., 567. The liability of this defendant for damages sustained by both plaintiffs and defendant, Hugh Puckett, must be determined in the first instance by *174 whether or not there was evidence sufficient to be submitted to the jury-tending to show that at the time of the collision Chas. H. Baucom, assistant superintendent of said defendant, was acting within the scope of his employment in driving the automobile in which plaintiffs were riding and with which defendant Puckett’s automobile collided. This defendant is not liable for said damages, although caused by the negligence of its employee, Chas. H. Baucom, while driving its automobile, unless said employee was at the time of such negligence acting within the scope of his employment. As said by Brogctm, J., in his opinion written for this Court in Grier v. Grier, 192 N. C., 760, the general principles of law governing such cases as this are well established. The chief difficulty encountered is in applying these general principles to the facts of particular cases.

The allegations of the complaints herein, and also of the answer of defendant, Hugh Puckett, setting up his cross-action against his co-defendant, are as follows:

“4. That the defendant, Chas. H. Baucom, is a citizen of the State of North Carolina, residing in the city of Charlotte, and was at the time and place hereinafter mentioned assistant district superintendent of the defendant, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, and as such had in his charge and was operating a certain Ford automobile owned and furnished him by the defendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, to use in connection with his duties as assistant district superintendent, and at the time hereinafter mentioned was operating said automobile with full knowledge, consent and approval of the defendant Tea Company.”

Answering these allegations defendants, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company and Chas. H. Baucom, say:

“The defendant, Chas. H. Baucom, admits so much thereof as alleges that he is a citizen of the city of Charlotte, county and State aforesaid, and was at the time and place hereinafter mentioned assistant district manager of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company; the said Chas. H. Baucom admits that at the times herein complained of he was operating a Ford automobile belonging to his codefendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company. Each and every other allegation therein contained are untrue and denied, the defendants Chas. H. Baucom and the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company alleging the truth to be as hereafter set out.”

These defendants in their further defense to any recovery against them or either of them say:

“1. That the defendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, operates a chain of stores in the city of Charlotte, county and State aforesaid, and the defendant, Chas. H. Baucom, was employed by the *175 said defendant, tbe Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, baying charge of one or more of its stores in said city, and that W. T. Peters was an employee of said defendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, and was employed as a clerk therein at the time herein mentioned, and that Mrs. Ruth Peters, the plaintiff herein named, and the wife of the said "W. T. Peters, on the night in question was in defendant’s store with her said husband, waiting until the said W. T. Peters had concluded his day’s employment, and that about the hour of 11:20 p.m. the defendant, Chas. H. Baucom, went by the store of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, where the said "W". T. Peters was engaged, and offered out of the generosity of his heart and the goodness' of his nature to allow the said ~W. T. Peters and his wife, Mrs. Ruth Peters, the plaintiff herein named, to ride with him in his said machine as far as their home in the said city of Charlotte.
“2. That the defendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, had not authorized or directed the said Chas. H. Baucom to extend this courtesy as aforesaid to the said plaintiff and her husband, and that in extending the courtesy herein mentioned, permitting the said plaintiff and her husband to ride in said car, was not in direct line of the duty of the defendant, Chas. H. Baucom, and has not the approval of the defendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, and at the time the said defendant, Chas. H. Baucom, drove said car the said Chas. H. Baucom was not in the regular line or lines of his duty for the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, and was not performing or doing the duties for which he was hired or then employed, but that the defendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, had no knowledge, expressed or implied, of the acts of said Chas. H. Baucom, had not assented thereto, expressly or impliedly, and had not knowledge and did not give its consent for the said Chas. H. Baucom to be conveying the said Mrs. Ruth Peters or her husband in its automobile.”

As pertinent to the question involved in the issue thus raised by the pleadings, plaintiffs offered evidence as follows:

W. T. Peters, one of the plaintiffs, testified as follows: “In June, 1925, I was living on Central Avenue, in the city of Charlotte. I worked at that time for the defendant, the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, at its store located on South Torrence Street. I know the defendant Chas. H. Baucom. At the time of the accident he was assistant supervisor over me for the defendant Tea Company. He checked up the stores to see the amount of business we were doing; talked to us about how to get the business, and came around every day to get the money to take it to the bank. He" came around to the store I was in. The defendant Tea Company had between twenty-five and thirty stores in Charlotte at that time. On the night of 27 June, 1925, *176 which was Saturday night, I was working at the Tea Company’s store on South Torrence Street. Mr. Baucom came to this store around ten o’clock, closing time, that night; he came there to show me about the day’s work, and some things about the business that had not been shown to me before. After we closed the store we went over the books thoroughly; he showed me about the things I did not know. I was a new man in the store. He came there around ten o’clock and stayed there until 11:20. He was traveling in a Ford roadster, which was the property of the defendant Tea Company. This car was used by the defendant Tea Company for the purpose of checking up on the stores. The Tea Company had owned this particular car for some time. Mr. Bankin was the supervisor before Mr. Baucom. Mr. Bankin used this car before he was transferred to Asheville; it was afterwards used by Mr. Baucom. I am not positive about where the car was kept.

“After I had closed the store we, Mr. Baucom and our wives, started home. I had two bags of groceries — our week’s supply — which I was taking home. Mrs. Baucom was with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.E. 595, 194 N.C. 172, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-great-atlantic-pacific-tea-co-nc-1927.