Van Troop v. Dew

234 S.W. 992, 150 Ark. 560, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 407
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 992 (Van Troop v. Dew) 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
Van Troop v. Dew, 234 S.W. 992, 150 Ark. 560, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 407 (Ark. 1921).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

W. E. Dew, one of the appellees, held a lease for the year 1920 and other years on a farm in Ashley. County through which the Wilmot Eoad Improvement District constructed a public road. The other appellees were his sub-tenants, all of whom separately cultivated and produced crops of corn and cotton. There were about 300 acres in cultivation on the farm, enclosed by a 4-wire fence around the- entire premises, there being no intersecting or cross fences. The construction of the road was begun in October of that year, and it occupied a right-of-way 60 feet wide through this farm. The Oliver Construction Company, one of the defendants in this action, entered into a contract with the road improvement district to construct the road and made sub-contracts with the other defendants. Appellant Van Troop took the contract for the grading and ditching, and appellant Maddox was his foreman. Appellant Van Orden-Winans Construction Company (a corporation) took the contract for what is termed the gravel work in the 'construction of culverts or bridges, and some of this work was sublet to L. L. Winans, one of the defendants. It is alleged somewhere in the pleadings that E. O. McDermott and E. L. McDuffie took the contract for removing fences. The farm occupied by appellees was entered for the purpose of constructing the road, the fence was broken, and, as is alleged in the complaint, it was not replaced for a considerable time, and cattle were permitted to enter at will and to destroy the crops. This is an action at law instituted by appellees against all of said parties jointly to recover damages resulting from the destruction of the crops by the depredation of cattle. Each of the appellees claimed separate damages foi the destruction of their respective crops. After the testimony had been introduced, the court gave peremptory instruction in favor of the Oliver Construction Company, the principal contractor, and Tipton, its foreman, and also in favor of McDermott and McDuffie and L. L. Winans. The issues were submitted to the jury concerning the liability of Van Troop, Maddox and the Van Orden-Winans Construction Company, and the jury returned a verdict against each of these appellants jointly, assessing damages separately in favor of each of the appellees, aggregating the sum of $1,700, total damages.

No question has been raised as to the right of appellees to join in a suit each to recover compensation for his separate injury, and,, it being conceded that, since there is sufficient identity in the causes of action to justify consolidation under our statute, there was no prejudice in joining the action originally, instead of instituting separate actions and then consolidating them. Mahoney v. Roberts, 86 Ark. 130.

It is, however, very earnestly insisted that the facts of this case, as disclosed by the evidence adduced, do not constitute joint liability on the part of appellants, if indeed it establishes liability at all, and that the court erred in submitting the case to the jury on instruction permitting recovery as on joint liability.

Of course, it must be conceded, as too clear for argument, that separate and distinct tortious acts resulting in separate and distinct injuries, even to the same subject-matter, do not create joint liability on the part of the tort-feasors. There seems to be a considerable contrariety of opinion among the authorities on the question whether separate and distinct acts of negligence. committed by different persons, which unite and culminate in injurious results, constitute joint liability of the different persons committing the separate tort, so as to make each responsible for the entire result. There are numerous authorities on both sides of this question. 26 R. C. L. 763-764; 29 Cyc. 484-488; Day v. Louisville Coal & Coke Co., (60 W. Va. 27) 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 167; Gibboney Sand Bar Co. v. Pulaski Anthracite Coal Co. (Va.) 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1185; Swam v. Tennessee Copper Co., 111 Tenn. 430. It is clear, however, that joint liability exists for separate acts of negligence where there is a common design or purpose or concert of action in the commission of the separate acts, or where such separate acts of negligence are concurrent as to time and place and which unite in setting in operation a single force which produces the injury. See the same authorities cited above.

The testimony was sufficient to bring this case within the rule last stated and to warrant the submission of the issue to the jury.

Viewing the testimony in the light most favorable to appellees, it shows that the fences were broken on or about October 18, 1920, and on subsequent days at different places, and were not replaced for a considerable length of time; that appellant Van Troop and his foreman caused the removal of the fence at least at one of the places, and that appellant Van Orden-Winans Construction Company caused the fence to be removed at other places; and that Van Troop, who was engaged in doing the ditching and grading, and the Van Orden-Winans Construction Company, which was doing the work of constructing culverts, used the openings for a considerable length of time in hauling and removing teams and other equipment back and forth 'without guarding the gaps or putting up the fences. The proof further shows that cattle were permitted to pass through these openings at night, and that the crops of -appellees were destroyed.

There was a conflict in the testimony, and some of the vdtnesses testified with reference to-a’map or plat showing the different gaps and the locations thereof, and this map is not in the. record, henee we are unable' to follow the testimony as accurately as could be done with the map before us. But there is, as before stated, testimony sufficient to show that each of the parties made gaps in the fence, which were. not replaced for a considerable length of time, and that both of the parties used these gaps without restoring the fence-or protecting the field from the depredation of cattle. Each of these parties was working to a common purpose,' that is to say, the construction of the road, and each used the open gaps while being under obligation to repair them so as to prevent injury to the farmers who had crops inside of the enclosure.

The case, therefore, comes not only within.the rule of joint liability where there is concert of action, but also within the other rule stated above, that there is joint liability where the different acts of negligence concur as to time and place and unite in setting in operation the force which causes the injury. In other words, they used the open gaps for the same purposes and at the same time, each being under duty to repair the gaps, and the conduct of each resulted in admission into the field of large numbers of cattle. It cannot be said that the entrance of the cattle was the result of the separate acts of either, but it was rather the result of. the act of both of the parties in failing to repair the gaps so as to keep the cattle out.

It is nest contended that the court erred in its instructions on this subject, and that the instructions were conflicting.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 992, 150 Ark. 560, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-troop-v-dew-ark-1921.