Tannahill v. Depositors Oil & Gas Co.

203 P. 909, 110 Kan. 254, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1922
DocketNo. 23,412
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 203 P. 909 (Tannahill v. Depositors Oil & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tannahill v. Depositors Oil & Gas Co., 203 P. 909, 110 Kan. 254, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 25 (kan 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the court .was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action for damages caused through the operation of a defective and dangerous automobile.

The defendant corporations were engaged in gas and oil development in Woodson county. In this work they employed a number of men, and used a number of automobiles, one of which was a Ford car which was out of repair. Its front' axle and radius rods were bent so that it could not be controlled. While in this defective condition the car continued to be used by the employees of defendants for some time, until one morning in April, Í919, some of the defendants’ employees in the village of Yernon got into it to ride to their work out in the country. Heading westerly along the north side of a street running east and west, the car swerved to the south side of the street, thence back to the north side, and again swerved almost due south across the street and struck the plaintiff. He was standing by his own automobile watching one pf his sons tinkering with it, when the defendants’ car struck and knocked him down. His injuries were severe and perhaps permanent.

Plaintiff’s action for damages charged negligence on the part- .of defendants in permitting their car while in a defective and dangerous condition to be used on the public highway.

[256]*256“That at the time hereinafter mentioned, when said plaintiff was injured, the said defendants furnished their said employees with an old and out of repair automobile to transfer the said employees and supplies from place to •place, well knowing that the same was out of repair and dangerous in this: That the same had a bent axle and the radius rods were bent and said car could not be controlled and kept in the road, but would run from one side of the road to the other and the drivers had no means of controlling the same.
“That while said car was in said condition, the said defendants, well knowing its condition, negligently permitted and furnished said car to its employees, . . . That the said employees aforesaid in attempting to pass along said street in said car were unable to control the same and said car left the beaten track and turned to the right angle and struck this plaintiff.”

Defendants filed a demurrer which was overruled, and then answered with a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.

Jury trial; verdict and judgment for plaintiff; defendants appeal.

The principal errors assigned will be noted in the order in which they are urged.

Defendants first address themselves to the insufficiency of plaintiff’s petition. Their demurrer thereto was overruled on August 11, 1919. This appeal was not taken until December 11, 1920, which is altogether too late for review. (Dyer v. Johnson, 109 Kan. 338, syl. ¶ 1, 198 Pac. 944.)

The defendants’ objections to the introduction of plaintiff’s evidence are based upon the want of some allegation in plaintiff’s petition stating that the accident happened while the car was being used in defendants’ business. Some such allegation would be material if this action sought to hold the defendants for negligence on the part of their employees, but that is not the negligence here complained of. It was the negligence of the masters, not the negligence of the servants, that gives rise to this cause of action.

The next error urged pertains to the admission of testimony showing what defendants’ superintendent, McLauren, said immediately after plaintiff was injured. The testimony, given by various witnesses, reads:

“A. When he got there he says, 'Mr. Tannahill I’m sorry this happened to you’; he said, ‘I wouldn’t have this happen for a thousand dollars’; he says, ‘that’s the last time that ear will ever go out until it goes to the shop again’ ... ■
“A. McLauren said: ‘I’m awfully sorry this happened, Mr. Tannahill’; and after they had gone, McLauren said to take the car put it in the shop and for nobody to run it until it was fixed up. . . .
“A. He said: ‘I’m sorry this happened, rather give you a thousand dollars than to have this happen; don’t know how bad, how sorry I am it hap[257]*257pened and the car will be run in the garage and not used until in shape to run.’ ”

This evidence was competent to show that a responsible officer of defendants knew that the car was defective and dangerous to operate. Of course the sympathetic remarks of McLauren to the injured plaintiff had no such significance, but it cannot be discerned how their rehearsal could prejudice the defendants’ cause before the jury.

Some other objections to plaintiff’s evidence are presented, but they are not serious and require no discussion.

■ Error is next assigned on the overruling of defendants’ demurrer to the evidence. Plaintiff’s cause of action was sufficiently well established to require its submission to a jury. At that stage of the trial, it was shown, if true, that the car’s defective and dangerous condition was well known to one or more of the responsible officials of the defendants, that such condition of the car had existed for a long time, that it was continually in use, and frequently used by defendants’ employees, and the negligence of defendants in permitting such a dangerous instrumentality to be used was well .established — if the jury saw fit to give credence to the testimony. Neither the fact of plaintiff’s injuries nor their extent, nor the amount of damages awarded, were seriously contested below, and these points are not contested here except as they .may be governed by matters of law. Much of defendants’ argument centers about the question whether the employees had authority to use the car on the morning of plaintiff’s injury. That, it seems to us, was well established. They were accustomed to use it. The superintendent knew they were using it. On the morning of the accident, the driver could not crank the car and the superintendent cranked it for him. There was some evidence of a rule of the defendants that the common roustabout employees should not use the car, but any such rule was habitually disregarded. If the case were permitted to turn upon the question whether the employees were in their masters’ service when the accident was established, that, too, although disputed, was shown by evidence. One employee was about to start to walk to his work, when the superintendent said: “Wait a minute and you can ride.” It seems that when cars were available the roustabouts were permitted to ride in them and to use them, and when not, they walked. (Snyder v. Eriksen, 109 Kan. 314, 198 Pac. 1080.)

[258]*258In Phillips v. Armour & Co., 108 Kan. 596, 196 Pac. 245, the defendant, during a street-car strike,- hired some trucks to transport its employees to and from the place of their employment. The defendant owed its employees no such duty, but it undertook that service for their benefit. Owing to the crowded condition of the truck, one of the employees had to sit on the end gate of the truck; it broke; and the employee was injured. He sued his employer. In the opinion affirming the judgment, this court said:

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 909, 110 Kan. 254, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tannahill-v-depositors-oil-gas-co-kan-1922.