Scrivner v. Boise Payette Lumber Co.

268 P. 19, 46 Idaho 334, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 108
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1928
DocketNo. 4657.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 268 P. 19 (Scrivner v. Boise Payette Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scrivner v. Boise Payette Lumber Co., 268 P. 19, 46 Idaho 334, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 108 (Idaho 1928).

Opinions

*340 TAYLOR, J.

This action was brought against the Boise Payette Lumber Company and Patrick Downs to recover damages for the death of Herman H. Scrivner, the husband of Ñola M. Scrivner and father of Herman H. Scrivner, a minor. This is an appeal by the defendant company from a judgment against it.

The defendant company was engaged in operating a lumber-mill, and owned the town site of Barber with, situated thereon in addition to the mill and other buildings, numer-. ous dwellings and a community hall with recreation room and dance-hall therein. The defendant Downs had been employed by the company for some nine years as a watchman, and had performed duties as such and in their nature policing the premises, and in doing so visited all parts of the premises. It may be assumed that he was knowingly permitted to assume and act in the role of policing the premises against disturbance of the peace, although no authority is shown for his designation or appointment with such police power. He was supplied with an automatic pistol, which he cleaned, oiled, cared for and carried in his pocket. The evidence tends to show that two or three days before the fatality, Downs had cleaned and loaded the pistol, and that he may have cocked it and not have put the safety catch in the safe position. While he purchased a ticket entitling him to attend a dance being given in the dance-hall by the box factory employees of defendant, the evidence would support the jury’s special finding that he was present as a watchman. Upon entering the passage-way leading to the dance-hall, he met the deceased, Scrivner, who was a personal friend of some long time. The evidence of what occurred at the immediate time is wholly *341 that of the defendant Downs, called as a witness for the plaintiff. He testified:

“I was standing there and Herman said, ‘Hello, Pat,’ and I says, ‘Hello, Herman.’ I had the billy in my pocket, and he says to me, ‘I would like to make you eat that stick,’ and then he kind of looked at me and laughed and says, ‘I could make you eat that stick,’ and put his hand on it like that way (indicating) and I put my hand in my pocket like that (indicating*) and took out the gun and I says, ‘Herman, while I am eating that stick you can be eating on that.’ Then I heard the report of a gun, and I looked at the gun and the safety catch was off, and I says, ‘It is an accident, accident.’ ”
"I never had any trouble with Scrivner prior to that night. Scrivner and I was always the best of friends. He was my second, door neighbor. I never had the least trouble with him. He was a nice, good fellow. He was not making a bit of disturbance there that night. When it happened, I was just standing there watching them dance, was just about to turn around and walk out and go up to the store when it happened. He said, ‘I would like to make you eat that stick.’ I took it to be jokingly, and I was joking. When I felt for my gun I did not intend to shoot Scrivner. Oh, God! No, I didn’t intend to do anything of the kind. I should say not. I wouldn’t have shot him for anything in the world.”

At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence the defendant offered no evidence and moved for a nonsuit upon the ground that the evidence failed to prove or tend to prove that at the time of the shooting Downs was engaged in any act which was expressly or by necessary implication within the line of his duty to the defendant under his employment, but that the evidence, without contradiction, proved the contrary, that he was not so engaged.

Appellant specifies as error: (1) The denial of this motion; (2') the insufficiency of the evidence, for the same reasons, to support the verdict or the findings of the jury *342 on special interrogatories; (3) the refusal of three requested instructions.

Appellant contends that the evidence conclusively establishes that both Scrivner and Downs were joking, were engaged in “horse-play” or “skylarking,” and that Downs in so doing stepped entirely out of the scope of his employment, and for this reason the company is not liable.

Upon a motion for nonsuit, all reasonable inferences must be indulged in favor of the plaintiff as to any facts which the evidence tends to establish. If there is a conflict in the evidence, or more than one inference may reasonably be drawn therefrom, then the question is for the jury. If, however, only one conclusion can be drawn, it is a matter for the court. (6 Labatt on Master and Servant, 2d ed., sec. 2275.)

Respondents present three theories in support of the judgment: (1) That the acts of Downs were within the scope of his employment in that the jury has found, in answer to special interrogatories, that “at the time of the discharge of the pistol” he was engaged in an act which was “expressly or by necessary implication within the line of his duty .... under his employment,” in that “he was acting as watchman and attending dance in interest of order and line with his duty”; (2) that the original negligence of Downs in having the pistol in his pocket in a loaded, cocked and unsafe condition was the negligence of the defendant company, and was the proximate cause of the injury, regardless ■ of whether the defendant is chargeable with his later acts of negligence in drawing and pointing it and causing it to be discharged; (3) that the pistol being an inherently dangerous instrumentality entrusted to a servant, the company is liable for its negligent handling in any event, as a failure to exercise the high degree of care necessary under such circumstances. An extended discussion of these points, as bearing upon the error alleged in refusal of requested instructions, becomes necessary.

Upon their first theory, counsel for respondents admit and stress the fact that the shooting was purely uninten *343 tional, and argue that as it was unintentional, it was not wilful, and did not remove the act from that of a servant to a wilful act of his as an individual. The trouble with this reasoning is that it begins only with the shooting or discharge of the gun, the last of and only one of the acts in a series, and leaves out of consideration whether the drawing or pointing of the pistol was intentionally done as a joke. The inquiry must begin earlier. Unless the master is chargeable with the drawing and pointing of the pistol, the unintentional discharge thereof is not a starting point or controlling as to the wilfulness of the servant’s act of wrongdoing, and is not the starting point of his possible stepping out of the character of a servant.

When the acts of a servant are not within the scope of his employment, it does not matter whether the injury was intentional or not. It is the stepping out of the character of a servant, and doing some act not within the scope of his employment, which renders it the independent act of the servant, not depending upon whether the resulting injury was intended or unintentional. The fact that Downs was engaged in his general line of duty in going about the premises as a watchman, and even as such carrying the pistol, does not of itself serve to render the appellant liable for his act in drawing and pointing it at deceased, if that were done as a joke.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nava v. RIVAS-DEL TORO
264 P.3d 960 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2011)
Leroy J. Murray v. United States
39 F.3d 1187 (Ninth Circuit, 1994)
Podolan v. Idaho Legal Aid Services, Inc.
854 P.2d 280 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 1993)
Clement v. Farmers Insurance Exchange
766 P.2d 768 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1988)
Sterling v. Bloom
723 P.2d 755 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1986)
Smith v. Thompson
655 P.2d 116 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 1982)
Thomas v. Poole
262 S.E.2d 854 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1980)
Maxwell v. Bell
591 P.2d 567 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1979)
Olson v. Staggs-Bilt Homes, Inc.
534 P.2d 1073 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1975)
Lundy v. Hazen
411 P.2d 768 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1966)
Dewey v. Keller
388 P.2d 988 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1964)
Smith v. Sharp
354 P.2d 172 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1960)
Gilbert v. Village of Bancroft
327 P.2d 378 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1958)
Fullmer v. Proctor
82 P.2d 1103 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1938)
Craig Ex Rel. Craig v. Village of Meridian
52 P.2d 145 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1935)
Eldridge v. Black Canyon Irrigation District
43 P.2d 1052 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1935)
Miller v. Gooding Highway Dist.
41 P.2d 625 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1935)
Miller v. Gooding Highway District
41 P.2d 625 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1935)
Hopkins v. Hemsley
22 P.2d 138 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1933)
Bean v. Katsilometes
298 P. 363 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P. 19, 46 Idaho 334, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scrivner-v-boise-payette-lumber-co-idaho-1928.