Stiewel v. Borman

37 S.W. 404, 63 Ark. 30, 1896 Ark. LEXIS 266
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 404 (Stiewel v. Borman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stiewel v. Borman, 37 S.W. 404, 63 Ark. 30, 1896 Ark. LEXIS 266 (Ark. 1896).

Opinion

BaTTEE, J.

This is an action by Fred Borman against Abe Stiewel, Joe Stiewel, Ed S. Stiewel, and Harry I. Stiewel for damages caused by personal injuries. He stated in his complaint that defendants were partners, and as such owned and operated a coal mine at Coal Hill, in Johnson county, in this state, in the month of September, 1892, and that, by reason of their negligence in allowing gas to accumulate in their mines where plaintiff was at work in their employment the same took fire, and he was burned and injured; and asked for judgment for damages.

Ed, Joe, and Harry Stiewel, answering, denied that they were partners, or had any interest in the mining business at Coal Hill; and alleged that the mine was the property of Abe Stiewel. The other defendant, Abe Stiewel, did not answer further than file a motion to quash the summons as to himself, on the ground that he was illegally served with process in Pulaski county, the suit having been brought in Johnson county.

In the course of the trial in the action witnesses were allowed to testify, over the objection of the defendant, that the mining business at Coal Hill was in the name of Stiewel & Co.; that Ed. S. Stiewel, in speaking of it, used the word “we,” and said that it belonged to him and his brothers; and that it was universally understood that Ed and Abe were partners in the same, and Harry and Joe had an interest.

Among the instructions given to the jury was the following : “If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this cause, and the jury further believe that the defendant Abe Stiewel was the owner of the mines, and that the other defendants, or some one of them, was operating the mines for him as his agent, then the defendant Abe Stiewel would be responsible with the other defendants in this case.” The objection urged against this instruction applies to others which were given.

Proof of partnership or reputation? Liability of agent to third person.

A' verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff against Abe and Ed S. Stiewel for $142, and in favor of Joe and Harry I. Stiewel; and judgment was rendered accordingly. Abe and Ed, after filing a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, appealed.

The evidence as to the admissions of Ed S. Stiewel were admissible as to himself, but could not be considered in determining the liability of the other defendants, or the relation of either of them to themselves. • The evidence as to what was universally understood was incompetent, and should riot have been admitted.

The instructions of the court, in effect, directed the jury, if they believed that plaintiff was entitled to recover, and that Abe Stiewel was the owner of the mines, and the other defendants, or any one of them, operated the same for him, as his agent,' to return a verdict in .favor of the plaintiff against him and the others who were his agents. This was error. The fact that they operated the mines as ag'ents when appel-lee was injured, while working in the same, by the ignition of the gas which had accumulated therein, did not render them liable for damages. If they owed him no duty, they were not liable to him for damages. A legal duty is an essential element of negligence. Without it, there can be no negligence, and there can be no duty to do any act when there is no legal right to do it. To entitle the appellee, therefore, to recover of appellants, he must state and show that they owed him a duty, and what it was, and tjiat they failed to perform it. Shearman & Redfield, Negligence (4th Ed.), sec. 8; Wharton, Negligencé (2d Ed.), secs. 3, 82.

An agent stands in the relation of confidence and privity to no one except his principal. To him alone he is under obligations to perform those duties which he expressly or impliedly assumed when he entered into that relation, and hence to him alone .is liable for their non-performance. Consequently, no third person is entitled to recover against him for damages sustained by reason of the non-performance or neglect of a duty which he owed to his principal.

He, however, like other persons, in discharging his duties to his principal, is bound to recognize and respect the rights and privileges of others. He must take care that he does not by his own act unnecessarily injure another. If he fails to do so, either negligently or intentionally, and thereby causes an injury to another, he is liable for damages to the party injured. The fact that he was acting as agent at the time will not relieve him of the liability. As is said in Delaney v. Rochereau, 34 Ha. Ann. 1123: “Hvery one, whether he is principal or agent, is responsible directly to persons injured by his own negligence, in fulfilling obligations resting upon him in his individual character, and which the law imposes upon him independent of contract. No man increases or diminishes his obligations to a stranger by becoming an agent. If, in the course of his agency,' he comes in contact with the person or property of a stranger, he is liable for any injury he may do to either, by his negligence in respect to duties imposed by law upon him in common with all other men.”

In Osborne v. Morgan, 130 Mass. 102, the plaintiff was at work as a carpenter, putting up by the directions of a corporation certain partitions in a room in which the corporation was conducting the business of making wire. The defendants, — one the superintendent, and the others agents and servants of the corporation,— being employed in that business, negligently and without regard to the safety of persons rightfully .in the room, placed a tackle-block and chains upon an iron nail suspended from the ceiling of the room, and suffered them to remain there in such a manner and so unprotected from falling that by reason thereof they fell upon aad injured the plaintiff. Chief Justice Gray, for the court, said: “It is often said in the books that an agent is responsible to third persons for misfeasance only, and not for nonfeasance. And it is doubtless true that if an agent never does anything towards carrying out his contract with his principal, but wholly omits or neglects to do so, the principal is the only person who can maintain any action against him for the nonfeasance. But if the agent once actually undertakes and enters upon the execution of a particular work, it is his duty to use reasonable care in the manner of executing it, so as not to cause any injury to third persons which may be natural consequences of his acts; and he cannot, by abandoning its execution midway and leaving things in a dangerous condition, exempt himself from liability to any person who suffers injury by reason of his having so left them without proper safeguards. This is not non-feasance, or doing nothing, but it is misfeasance, doing improperly. * * * In the case at bar the negligent hanging and keeping by the defendants of the block and chains in such a place and manner as to be in danger of falling upon persons underneath was a misfeasance, or improper dealing with instruments in the defendants’' actual use or control, for which they are responsible to any person lawfully in the room and injured by the fall,, and who is not prevented by his relation to the defendants from maintaining the action.”

This distinction may also be illustrated by the language of Judge Metcalf in Bell v.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 404, 63 Ark. 30, 1896 Ark. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stiewel-v-borman-ark-1896.