Sherwood v. Huber & Huber Motor Exp. Co.

151 S.W.2d 1007, 286 Ky. 775, 135 A.L.R. 263, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 31, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 151 S.W.2d 1007 (Sherwood v. Huber & Huber Motor Exp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherwood v. Huber & Huber Motor Exp. Co., 151 S.W.2d 1007, 286 Ky. 775, 135 A.L.R. 263, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 329 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Coubt by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing.

On September 14, 1937, tbe appellant and plaintiff below, Mary Evelyn Sherwood, while traveling on one of the streets of the city of Louisville in a hired taxicab was severely injured by a collision of the taxicab in which she was riding with a truck owned and operated by the appellees and defendants below, N. F. Huber, William C. Huber, and L. H. Huber, doing business under the firm name of “Huber and Huber Motor Express Company. ’ ’ The truck was being operated by an agent and servant of the Hubers whose name was Joseph Guenther. Plaintiff instituted an action in the Jefferson circuit court, No. 253,908, against the taxicab company and Guenther, the agent and servant of the instant defendants, in which she obtained judgment against them for the sum of $3,760, upon which she raised execution, followed by a return of “No property found.” She thereupon filed this action in the Jefferson circuit court against defendants as the masters of Guenther, in which she alleged the facts we have recited, including her abortive effort to recover for her injuries by the filing of her first action referred to. A demurrer to the petition, filed by the defendants and appellees, was overruled, followed by an answer containing three paragraphs, the first of which was a denial of the material allegations in the petition; the second was a plea of con *777 tributory negligence, whilst the third one relied on the filing of the first action by plaintiff against the instant defendants’ servant alone, with the knowledge on her part at the time that he was the servant of his masters (the instant defendants) and that in pursuing that course she elected to prosecute her cause of action against defendants’ servant alone. They then charged that such facts had the' effect of barring her right to maintain the instant action against them. A demurrer filed by plaintiff to that third paragraph of the answer was overruled. Plaintiff declined to plead further and her petition was dismissed, to reverse which she prosecutes this appeal.

From our brief statement of the case it will be perceived that the precise and exact question for determination is that defendants (the master of their servant, Guenther) are liable to plaintiff, if at all, under the doctrine of respondeat superior, since there is no claim of any positive or active negligence on their part constituting any participation,, in the alleged wrongful negligence of their servant in producing plaintiff’s injuries. For that reason it is argued by learned counsel for defendants that they were and are not joint tort feasors with their servant, but that they are only secondarily liable to plaintiff — if at all — under judicially declared public policy, and that their liability to her, as so founded, is severable as to them, as masters of their first sued servant, and not as a joint tort feasor with him whose active negligence, if any, — without any participation therein on the part of the defendants — was the sole cause of plaintiff’s injuries and consequent damages.

It is then argued by counsel with equal confidence and much research that as a consequence of the first premise (no joint liability as joint feasors) plaintiff, with knowledge of the relationship between Guenther and themselves, should have joined the instant defendants as masters in her first action against their servant, Guenther, and because of her failure to do so she is now es-topped to maintain this later separate action against their clients.

It will, therefore, be seen that our task is to unscramble and unravel a most confused condition of the law as declared by some courts dealing with the involved questions, and to arrive at a just, fair and common sense conclusion, stripped of the metaphysical jargon em *778 ployed by such courts in wrestling with the presented questions — all of which appears to have emanated from the procedural distinction at common law between actions for purely trespass, and trespass on the case. But the great majority of the courts of the Union — including Federal courts — where common law forms of action have been abolished by the enactment of code proceedings, hold, as is stated in annotations in 98 A. L. R. beginning on page 1057 that: “The basis of this distinction is purely technical, and arose from the adoption of the reformed procedure. Under the old forms the remedy against the master who did not command or participate in the wrong, but who, in the event of his servant’s negligence, had the fault imputed to him, would be an action in case, while the action against the servant would be in trespass; and these actions could not be joined. This is largely responsible for the confusion apparent since the distinction between actions in trespass and actions in case has been abolished in most jurisdictions, a few courts still holding to the old rule that master and servant cannot be joined in an action of tort where the master’s only responsibility is under the doctrine of respondeat superior, while most courts permit them to be sued jointly, either because they regard them as joint tort feasors, or for some other reason. ’ ’

There then follow cases discarding the common law distinction from the courts of the United States — including the Supreme Court — and the highest courts of Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin; whilst on page 1062 of 98 A. L. R. the annotator lists some inferior Federal courts and opinions from Colorado, and an earlier case from Connecticut (but later overruled) the District of Columbia, an early but later overruled case from Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Vermont which apparently continue to hold that the master and servant cannot be joined in one action as joint tort feasors, where the master is liable only for derivative negligence, under the doctrine of respondeat superior. But, whether in sucli jurisdictions the common law procedure has or not been abolished and superseded by provided Code proceedings does not *779 appear. The case in 98 A. L. R., which the annotation referred to follows, is one from the Supreme Court of Vermont (George W. Raymond v. Salvatore Capobianco, 107 Vt. 295, 178 A. 896, 98 A. L. R. 1051), in which that court held that the master and servant could not in such circumstances be joined in one action by the plaintiff, and that plaintiff should elect which one of the two he would proceed against, after which his election would bar him from later proceeding against the other, or others only derivatively liable.

However, this court, as we have seen, in the domestic cases listed in the annotation referred to — and also a majority of other courts of the Union- — discard the theory of the Vermont court, and those adopting the same view, and permit the joinder of a master, whose liability is derivative only through the doctrine of respondeat superior with his negligent servant, as though they were technical joint tort feasors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 1007, 286 Ky. 775, 135 A.L.R. 263, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherwood-v-huber-huber-motor-exp-co-kyctapphigh-1941.