Schoenith, Inc. v. Forrester

69 So. 2d 454, 260 Ala. 271, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 17, 1953
Docket4 Div. 746
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 So. 2d 454 (Schoenith, Inc. v. Forrester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoenith, Inc. v. Forrester, 69 So. 2d 454, 260 Ala. 271, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 74 (Ala. 1953).

Opinion

*273 LAWSON, Justice.

Shortly after .dark on Sunday night, February 17, 1952, at a point a few miles northwest of Brundidge on that part of U. S. Highway 231 situate between Brundidge and Troy in Pike County, Alabama, there was a collision between a truck owned by W. J. Forrester and Hobson Eddins, which was being driven by a colored employee by the name of Ike Lee, and an automobile being driven by Kirby C. Floyd. The truck was moving in a southeasterly direction, toward Brundidge, and the automobile in a northwesterly direction toward Troy.

W. J. Forrester and Hobson Eddins, doing business as Sanitary Dairy, brought this suit in the circuit court of Pike County against Kirby C. Floyd and Schoenith, Inc., a corporation, for damages caused to their truck by the collision.

The case went to the jury upon Count 1 of the complaint, which charged simple negligence, and the defendants’ -plea of the general issue. Count 2 of the' complaint, which charged wantonness, was amended out before the case went to the jury.

The verdict of the'jury was in favor of the plaintiffs against both defendants. Judgment was in accord with the verdict. The motion for new trial filed by the defendant Schoenith, .Inc., having been overruled, it has appealed to. this court. The defendant Floyd has not appealed.

In order for the plaintiffs to recover against the defendant Schoenith, Inc., it was necessary for the plaintiffs to show not only that the negligence of Floyd was the proximate cause of the damage to their truck, but that Floyd, the driver of the automobile, at the time of the collision was an agent of Schoenith, Inc., acting within the line and scope of his authority. Cox v. Roberts, 248 Ala. 372, 27 So.2d 617.

The testimony given by the 'witnesses called in behalf of the plaintiffs relates only to the circumstances surrounding the accident. It seems to be conceded by appellant that such evidence presented a question for jury decision as to whether the negligence of Floyd was the proximate cause of the damage to appellees’ truck and that as to that question the verdict and judgment are amply supported by the evidence.

No witness called by the plaintiffs gave testimony going to show that at the time of the collision Floyd, the driver of the automobile, was an agent of Schoenith, Inc., and was acting within the line and scope of his employment,

However, before the taking of testimony began it was stipulated in open court, among other things, as follows: “ * * * that the -automobile being operated by the Defendant Floyd was the property of the Defendant Schoenith, Inc.”

The defendants 'called two witnesses, the 'defendant Floyd, the driver-' of the automobile-, and W. T. Hairr, an assistant sales manager of the defendant Schoenith, Inc.

Floyd’s testimony, other than that.which relates to the charge of negligence, is hereafter summarized:

Floyd had an established home in Troy, Alabama, where his wife and family lived. During the first part of February, 1952, he was employed by Schoenith, Inc., as a .candy salesman. He was to work out of Andalusia and to cover the territory within a radius of twenty-five miles of that city. Shortly after his employment Floyd was sent to Charlotte, North Carolina, where he worked with another salesman for about one week in order to familiarize himself with his employer’s methods of doing business.

His period of training having been completed, a new 1952 Studebaker automobile was turned over to Floyd by Schoenith, Inc. The trunk and back, seat of the automobile were .loaded with candy belonging to Schoenith, Inc.

- On Saturday morning, February 16, 1952, .Floyd left Charlotte in the Studebaker automobile loaded with candy, tinder instructions to be in Andalusia, Alabama, on *274 •Sunday afternoon, February 17, 1952, so ■that he could begin his work on the following morning. Floyd was given no instructions as to the route which he should follow in proceeding from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Andalusia, Alabama. He was free to choose the route he would follow.

Floyd, driving the aforementioned Studebaker automobile, entered Alabama at Eufaula. From Eufaula he .went to Clio and from Clio to Brundidge. When he reached Brundidge, which was only about ten miles from Troy, he entered U. S. Highway 231 and proceeded in the direction of Troy, but stopped at “Jim Ballard’s place” located about three miles southeast of Troy. Later, he left Jim Ballard’s place and drove through Troy, coming within a block of his home, and proceeded to “Sergeant Kelly’s place” located approximately four miles north of Troy on the Montgomery highway. He remained there approximately an hour and then drove back through Troy and stopped again at Jim Ballard’s place, where he remained until midnight. At midnight he drove in a southeasterly direction on U. S. Highway 231 to Brundidge and then drove to “Bogum Senn’s place” located four or five miles south of Brundidge on U. S. Highway 231. He remained at the latter place until late in the afternoon or the early part of Sunday night, February 17, 1952, when he drove the Studebaker automobile back through Brundidge arid was on U. S. Highway 231 between Brundidge and Troy when the collision occurred.

According to Floyd, at the time of the collision he was driving the corporate defendant’s Studebaker automobile, loaded with its candy, to Andalusia, Alabama, where he was to begin his work on Monday morning. There is nothing in Floyd’s testimony tending to show that he expected 'to even stop at his home in Troy.

It also appears without dispute in the evidence that having entered Alabama at Eufaula, Floyd, in driving to Brundidge, was following a direct route to Andalusia and it also clearly appears that in proceeding from Brundidge to Andalusia it would ■be proper for Floyd to drive through Troy :in order to follow the most direct route.

The testimony of W. T. Hairr is in substance as follows: .-

As assistant sales manager of Schoenith, Inc., he employed Kirby C. Floyd along about the middle of February, 1952, and then sent him to Charlotte, North Carolina, for a week of training.

On his direct examination this witness ■testified that Floyd on his return trip from Charlotte was to spend Saturday night, February 16, 1952, with his family in Troy and to proceed to Andalusia on Sunday afternoon, February 17, where he was to get a place to stay and a place to store his candy and then was to meet the witness on Monday morning ready to go to work. The witness was to call Floyd at the latter’s residence on Sunday, February 17, 1952, in order to find out where to meet him in Andalusia the following Monday morning.

On cross-examination the witness admitted that he had not instructed Floyd to spend Saturday night, February 16, 1952, with his family in Troy, but had merely suggested it. He further testified on cross-examination that his company did not undertake to tell its representatives where they were to sleep and did not so tell Floyd. He also admitted that Schoenith, Inc., didn’t tell Floyd which route to take from Charlotte to Andalusia... It didn’t give him a road map and mark the route and tell him which roads to travel. During the course of the cross-examination of this witness the following transpired: “Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 So. 2d 454, 260 Ala. 271, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoenith-inc-v-forrester-ala-1953.