Stephens v. Short

285 P. 797, 41 Wyo. 324, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 13
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1930
Docket1585
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 285 P. 797 (Stephens v. Short) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Short, 285 P. 797, 41 Wyo. 324, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 13 (Wyo. 1930).

Opinion

Riner, Justice.

A proceeding by direct appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Hot Springs County, in favor of Yaughn Stephens, plaintiff and respondent, brings this cause here for review. The case appears to have been tried twice, the jury in the first trial disagreeing and the judgment in question being entered upon the verdict of the jury rendered upon the second submission. The defendants and appellants, George B. Short, as administrator of the estate of Frank B. McFarlane, deceased, and Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, a corporation, will be mentioned hereinafter either as the “administrator” and the “surety” respectively, or generally as the “defendants”; while *329 the plaintiff and respondent will be referred to as the “plaintiff.”

The action in the court below was brought by plaintiff upon the official bond of Frank B. McFarlane, as sheriff of Hot Springs County, Wyoming. The defendants were severally the duly qualified administrator of his estate and the surety.upon said bond. That obligation was in the penal Sum of $4,000, and one of the conditions of the instrument demanded by the statute under which it was given (Sec. 1459, C. S. Wyo. 1920) and appearing therein was that McFarlane, as sheriff of said county of Hot Springs, should “faithfully perform the duties of sheriff of said county as required by law.” Plaintiff’s cause of action was grounded upon alleged negligence on the part of McFarlane as sheriff and one Ed Goodfellow, his under-sheriff, in asserted violation of this condition of the bond, whereby plaintiff suffered severe injuries to his damage in an alleged amount more than double its penalty. A claim for damages in this sum was presented to the administrator and by him rejected, and these facts were duly pleaded in plaintiff’s petition. The particular acts of negligence in substance alleged by plaintiff were that the sheriff and un-dersheriff, being required by law to exercise ordinary and reasonable care for the safety of plaintiff while in their custody and while he was being officially taken in their ear to Thermopolis, Wyoming, negligently and carelessly operated the automobile so that it was precipitated over the edge of a ravine and plaintiff injured.

The defendants by their answer put in issue the negligence charged, admitting the execution of the bond and its terms, as well as most of the details of the transaction leading up to the accident out of which plaintiff’s injuries arose.

On the trial the proofs on plaintiff’s behalf — the defendants not introducing any evidence whatsoever — showed in the main the following state of facts:

Pursuant to a sworn complaint, a criminal warrant had been, on August 21, 1927, issued by a justice of the peace *330 of Hot Springs County, Wyoming, directing Sheriff Mc-Farlane to arrest the plaintiff and Cal Stephens, his father, and to bring them before the justice to answer a charge of grand larceny. Thereafter and on August 23, 1927, Mc-Farlane and Ed Goodfellow, his undersheriff, proceeded to execute this warrant. They drove in an automobile seven or eight miles easterly from the town of Thermopolis, Wyoming, to an oil lease where plaintiff and his father were employed. Upon arrival at their destination the officers served the warrant, placed the two men under arrest, directed them to get into the back seat of the auto, and the party then started on the return journey to Thermopolis. The undersheriff, Goodfellow, drove the car and McFarlane sat on the front seat beside him.

The road leading back to Thermopolis ran through some rough country and at one point it led, on a down grade, to the edge of a precipice and made such a sharp turn to the left along the edge of the declivity that while a small car could make the turn in safety, a large car, such as the officers had, could not do so without backing up at least once and then proceeding forward around the turn. When the automobile in which the four men were riding approached this turn, the undersheriff, according to plaintiff’s testimony, slowed the car nearly to a stop, but he did not cause it to move backward; instead he then shifted the gears of the car in such a way that the vehicle lurched forward and fell over the edge of the cliff, with the result that plaintiff suffered the injuries concerning which complaint is made and all the other occupants of the automobile were killed.

Objection was made on behalf of both defendants and for each of them individually that plaintiff’s testimony concerning what took place at the time of the accident was inadmissible against either or both by reason of the provisions of Section 5807, Compiled Statutes of Wyoming 1920. This objection was overruled and due exception was saved to the ruling. Upon the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, the defendants renewed this objection in the form of a motion *331 for a directed verdict in their favor on that as well as other grounds. This motion being denied by the court and an exception to this ruling also taken by defendants, the cause was submitted to the jury and the verdict already mentioned followed. The judgment entered was against both the administrator and the surety.

The official bond given by the sheriff was in form joint and several, and, as required by law (Sec. 1459, W. C. S. 1920) ran to the State of Wyoming, as obligee. However, under Section 5581, W. C. S. 1920, plaintiff, as a “person injured” was entitled to bring the action in his own name. Lynch v. Burgess, 40 Wyo. 30, 273 Pac. 691, 62 A. L. R. 849.

The action of the trial court in receiving plaintiff’s testimony over the objection of defendants, made as above recited, as well as the overruling of their motion for a directed verdict, are among the assigned errors presented for our consideration.

Section 5807, supra, contains, among others, the following provisions:

“A party shall not testify where the adverse party is * * * an executor or administrator, # * *
“5. In an action or proceeding by or against a partner or joint contractor, the adverse party shall not testify to transactions with, or admissions by, a partner or joint contractor since deceased, unless the same were made in the presence of the surviving partner or joint contractor; and this rule shall be applied without regard to the character in which the parties sue or are sued.
“* * # and when a case is plainly within the reason and spirit of the last three sections, though not within the strict letter, their principles shall be applied.”

From an inspection of this statute as it first appeared in our legislation, as well as the legislation of the state from which it was borrowed, it is clear that the words “the last three sections” appearing in the concluding sentence of Section 5807 were originally intended to refer to the pro *332 visions of Sections 5804 to 5807 inclusive — Section 5805 originally not being a separate section but being included in the following section dealing with privileged communications.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P. 797, 41 Wyo. 324, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-short-wyo-1930.