Rosser v. Standard Milling Company

312 S.W.2d 106, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 732
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 14, 1958
Docket46412
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 312 S.W.2d 106 (Rosser v. Standard Milling Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosser v. Standard Milling Company, 312 S.W.2d 106, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 732 (Mo. 1958).

Opinion

HOLMAN, Commissioner.

At about 5:30 p. m. on September 17, 1954, plaintiffs received personal injuries and damage to their property when the car in which they were riding was struck by a truck being driven by defendant Edward F. Doyle. In this action against Doyle and the truck owner, Standard Milling Company, plaintiff Horton Rosser obtained a verdict for $2,965.50 and plaintiff Lawson Fore a verdict for $7,000. The verdicts were against both defendants. Doyle did not appeal. The corporate defendant appealed from the ensuing judgments to the Kansas City Court of Appeals but that. *108 court transferred the appeal here as it was of the view that the amount in dispute exceeded $7,500. We have appellate jurisdiction for the reason stated by the court of appeals. Keely v. Arkansas Motor Freight Lines, Mo.Sup., 278 S.W.2d 765.

Plaintiffs’ recovery against the appellant was based upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, the petition alleging “that at all times hereinafter mentioned Edward F. Doyle was the agent, servant and employee of defendant Standard Milling Company and, at the time of the collision hereinafter described, said Edward F. Doyle was engaged in the business of defendant Standard Milling Company, and at said time was acting within the scope of his employment.”

The instant collision occurred on U. S. Highway 36 about one mile west of Troy, Kansas. Plaintiffs were both professional rodeo contestants. On the afternoon in question they were en route from Topeka, Kansas, to Chillicothe, Missouri. The car in which they were riding was owned by Rosser and was being driven at the time by Lawson Fore. Attached to the car was Rosser’s horse trailer with his horse in it.

As plaintiffs proceeded eastwardly their car was following a large automobile transport truck. As they neared the point of collision Fore saw the truck Doyle was driving approaching from the east. According to the testimony of Mr. Fore, the westbound truck veered across the road toward the south and sideswiped the transport. Following that impact the truck bounced back to the north and then returned to the south side of the road, striking the left side of the Rosser car. As a result of the collision, the Rosser car went over a 15-foot embankment and came to rest on its top. Plaintiffs got out of the car and were able to pull the horse out of the overturned trailer. They returned to the highway about five or ten minutes after the collision.

Frank Carter, undersheriff of Doniphan ■County, Kansas, testified that shortly before the instant cpllision he had received a call advising him that “a truck was taking, too much of the highway” and he started out to find it; that when about one-half mile from the scene of the occurrence in question he received a radio call advising him of a “wreck just west of Troy”; that upon arrival he found a truck “crossways of the road on its side,” and a Dodge car with trailer attached “on its top over the grade”; a transport truck was parked 200 feet beyond; that he talked with Doyle whom he described as “drunk” and, following that conversation, took him to jail. The view we take of this case makes it unnecessary to further detail plaintiffs’ evidence except for the testimony of under-sheriff Carter and plaintiff Fore as to statements made by Doyle at the scene of the collision and later when he was in jail. The first contention briefed by the appellant is that the court erred in admitting testimony (over its repeated objections) as to those out-of-court statements of Doyle.

The testimony of Carter which is complained of herein (objections omitted) .is as follows:

“Q. Did you have occasion to talk to Doyle while he was in jail? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Tell us just what he told you about this accident. A. You want when I talked to him at the scene ?

“Q. Both at the scene and later on. A, I asked whose truck it was, where he lived, and he didn’t have a driver’s license and I asked how come he was driving that truck without a license. He said, T don’t usually drive it, but I had to have some braces for a crib — .’ I said, ‘Where is the braces? They aren’t on the truck,’ and he said, ‘They couldn’t make them this evening, and I got to go back after them in a couple of days, had them ordered.’

“Q. Did he tell you where he had been? A. Been to St. Joseph.

“Q. Did he tell you where he intended to get the braces? A. No, I don’t believe he did. He said they had to make them was the reason he. didn’t have them.

*109 “Q. Is that what he told you at the scene ? A. That is right.

“Q. Now then, did you have occasion to talk to him along the same lines at a later time? A. Oh, yes — talked to him every day [in jail].

“Q. Did he tell you at any other time about the mission he had in Missouri? A. He also told me he had a couple of teeth pulled while he was over there and that is the reason he drinks.”

In rebuttal, Lawson Fore testified (objections omitted) as follows:

“Q. Mr. Fore, did you talk to Mr. Doyle at the scene and immediately after this accident occurred? A. I talked to him as soon as we got the horse out of the trailer and could get onto the pavement.

“Q. Did you make any inquiry from Mr. Doyle as to how or why he happened to be using this truck? A. I said, ‘How come you are using the company truck?’ and he said he had been to St. Joseph after some parts.”

The various objections interposed to the foregoing testimony were that the statements of Doyle were hearsay, not a part of the res gestae, and an attempt to prove the fact and scope of agency and the scope of employment by out-of-court statements of the agent.

In connection with the foregoing it should be noted that it appeared from answers of appellant to interrogations that on September 17, 1954, Standard Milling Company owned the truck in question, and that Doyle was employed by said company as manager of its grain elevator at Hiawatha, Kansas, and his duties “consisted of receiving, shipping, storing and merchandising of grain, and improving and maintaining buildings and equipment,” and that the “truck was used for moving grain on premises from flat storage facilities to dump pit and in moving railroad cars into position for loading grain. Also used in picking up supplies for elevator. Edward F. Doyle was authorized to use truck in going to and from work in Hiawatha, Kansas.”

Mr. Doyle did not testify or appear at the trial. Defendants, however, presented the testimony of Harry Rosenberger, a utility worker at the elevator (the only employee other than Doyle), who stated that Mr. Doyle left the elevator about 9:30 on the morning of September 17, and never returned. On cross-examination he stated that on one occasion Doyle drove the truck to Falls City, Nebraska, and on another to Atchison, Kansas, but the witness was not permitted to state whether those trips were on company or personal business; that on one or two occasions Doyle had driven the truck to St. Joseph for lumber.

Max G.

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Bluebook (online)
312 S.W.2d 106, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosser-v-standard-milling-company-mo-1958.