Selaster v. Simmons

7 P.2d 258, 39 Ariz. 432, 1932 Ariz. LEXIS 252
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1932
DocketCivil No. 3126.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 7 P.2d 258 (Selaster v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Selaster v. Simmons, 7 P.2d 258, 39 Ariz. 432, 1932 Ariz. LEXIS 252 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

This is an appeal by John Selaster and Mae Selaster, husband and wife, from a judgment against them and in favor of Raymond Simmons for damages to the latter’s person and property, claimed to have been sustained in a collision between the automobiles of plaintiff and defendants through the negligence of Mae Selaster, who was at the time the driver of defendants’ automobile. The plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for $1,126.61.

*434 The first seven assignments question the right of plaintiff to have judgment against John Selaster, the husband. The evidence is undisputed that the automobile driven by Mae Selaster when the accident occurred was community property, and it is likewise undisputed that she was at the time looking for her husband; that she had gone to the garage in Yuma where the car had been left to be washed, got it, and was on her way to get her husband when the two cars came together. Under such circumstances, we think the community, consisting of the husband and wife, was liable for the wife’s tort, and that the judgment properly ran against both of them.

The community law of this state, as construed by our decisions, is more like that of the state of Washington than any other of the community property states. Cosper v. Valley Bank, 28 Ariz. 373, 237 Pac. 175. In La Tourette v. La Tourette, 15 Ariz. 200, Ann. Cas. 1915B 70, 137 Pac. 426, we said:

“The law makes no distinction between the husband and wife in respect to the right each has in the community property. It gives the husband no higher or better title than it gives the wife. It recognizes a marital community wherein both are equal. Its policy plainly expressed is to give the wife in this marital community an equal dignity, and make her an equal factor in the matrimonial gains. . . .
‘ ‘ The law, in giving this power to the husband during coverture to dispose of the personal property, does not do this in recognition of any higher or superior right that he has therein, but because the law considers it expedient and necessary in business transactions affecting the personalty to have an agent of the community with power to act.”

In Milne v. Kane, 64 Wash. 254, Ann. Cas. 1913A 318, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 88, 116 Pac. 659, it was held that the community was liable for the negligent injury of the plaintiff in the operation by the husband of an automobile for the benefit of the community, *435 consisting of the husband and wife. In other words, it was held that the community was the wrongdoer. The court there said:

“In this case, if the negligence of the husband’s causing the injury may be held to be a tort, it was the tort of the community, because the husband was acting for the community. It is clear, we think, that if the community, consisting of the two defendants, had employed a man to drive the automobile, and the negligence of this employee had caused the injury, the community would be liable. This would follow because the employee would be the agent of the community, and for his negligence in the line of his duty the community would be liable. The fact that Mr. Kane was himself the driver, and was negligent, does not change the liability. He was one of the community, acting in the line of the business for the benefit of the community, and was as much an agent for both as an employee doing that work would have been. If the community joined in the tort, the community was liable. We are satisfied, therefore, that the negligence here, though actually committed by the husband, was the negligence of both himself and wife, because it was committed by him as agent of the community, in the line of his duty, in a business in which the community was engaged.”

This rule has been referred to and approved a number of times in that state. Waste v. Rugge, 68 Wash. 90, 122 Pac. 988; McPherson v. Twin Harbor Stevedoring & Tug Co., 139 Wash. 61, 245 Pac. 747; Meek v. Cavanaugh, 147 Wash. 153, 265 Pac. 178; Bortle v. Osborne, 155 Wash. 585, 67 A. L. R. 1152, 285 Pac. 425; Merritt v. Newmark, 155 Wash. 517, 285 Pac. 442. We cannot see that the rule should be different where the tort is committed by the wife instead of the husband. She was using the car at the time for the benefit of the community, and was its agent. If it should be conceded that under section 2175, Eevised Code of 1928, the community is liable only for debts incurred by the husband, the fact still *436 remains that here the liability arose through the negligence of the community’s agent, for which the community is responsible. If the husband had turned the automobile over to his chauffeur to do an errand for the benefit of the community, under the rule the community would have been liable for the chauffeur’s negligence. Likewise, if the husband permitted, authorized or directed his wife to go on an errand for the community, the latter would be liable for negligence.

This view of the community’s liability for the torts of the wife is not, as suggested by defendants, in conflict with the decision of this court in Hageman v. Vanderdoes, 15 Ariz. 312, Ann. Cas. 1915D 1197, L. R. A. 1915A 491, 138 Pac. 1053. In that case the tort of the wife, for which the husband was sought to be held was not committed in the interest or for the benefit of the community. We there said:

“The weight of authority holds that the common-law liability of the husband for the voluntary torts of the wife is abrogated, so far as concerns torts connected with her separate property, by married women’s statutes, which, in general, confer upon the wife the ownership and management of her own property, free from the control of her husband, without expressly touching the subject of liability for her torts.”

In Christensen v. McCann, 41 Wyo. 101, 282 Pac. 1061, a case relied upon by defendants, it is true the holding was that the husband was not liable for the negligence of his wife in operating* an automobile, but the facts, as stated by the court, were as follows: “It is undisputed that the latter [Mrs. McCann] is the sole owner of the Buick coupe, that Mr. McCann had no interest whatever in it, and that he was not present when the accident happened. No phase of family purpose or agency is required to be considered,” a very different state of facts from what we *437 have here. Besides, Wyoming is not a community law state.

In Murray v. Newmyer, 66 Colo. 459, 182 Pac. 888, it was held the husband was not liable for the negligence of his wife in operating an automobile “jointly owned by defendants.” But in that state they do not have the community property law.

From our conclusion, the exception to the following insti’uction cannot be sustained:

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Bluebook (online)
7 P.2d 258, 39 Ariz. 432, 1932 Ariz. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/selaster-v-simmons-ariz-1932.