Vind v. Asamblea Apostolica De La Fe en Christo Jesus

307 P.2d 85, 148 Cal. App. 2d 597, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2400
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1957
DocketCiv. 5347
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 307 P.2d 85 (Vind v. Asamblea Apostolica De La Fe en Christo Jesus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vind v. Asamblea Apostolica De La Fe en Christo Jesus, 307 P.2d 85, 148 Cal. App. 2d 597, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2400 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

This action was filed by plaintiffs and respondents, Herbert A. Vind and wife, alleging that on October 17, 1953, defendant Raphael Arias was so negligently *598 operating an automobile as to cause it to crash into a ear driven by plaintiff husband, which caused serious personal injuries and property damage to plaintiffs. It is then alleged that defendant Arias was the agent, servant and employee of defendant and appellant Asamblea Apostólica de la Fe en Christo Jesus, a corporation, also known as Apostolic Church of the Faith in Christ, Jesus (hereinafter referred to as the Church). Defendant Arias’s answer denied negligence, denied agency, and pleaded contributory negligence of plaintiffs. Appellant Church made the same denials and defenses. A trial without a jury resulted generally in a finding in favor of the plaintiffs and a judgment was entered against both defendants for $21,943.51. Defendant Church alone appealed and the only questions presented are: (1) Is the evidence sufficient to support the finding of the trial court that the driver of the car, Arias, was then and there the agent, servant and employee of the Church; and (2) If so, was he acting within the scope of his employment?

On the day of the accident, about 10 a. m., plaintiff was driving his car north on highway 99 in Tulare County. Arias was driving his own car south on that highway. A Mr. Cota, a bishop and secretary of the Church corporation testified, under section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure that on October 16th, 17th and 18th, the Church was having a regional convention or a conference of all the 29 churches the district at Tulare; that defendant Arias was then assistant pastor of a church in Sanger, the title to which was held by defendant Church; that Arias had a license to preach the gospel, baptize, and officiate at funeral ceremonies. The license bears the seal of the appellant Church corporation. It was received in evidence. He testified that some months prior to and after October 17th, the original pastor in the Sanger church was confined to the hospital and Arias was assisting the pastor in the Sanger church but was paid nothing by the Church for his services; that he was working in the daytimes at a “Frosty Freeze Company’’and in the Sanger church work at night; [Arias’s name and address (the address of the Sanger church) appears on the register of ministers in the Church as a deacon] ; that in said defendant Church corporation the president is a bishop; that the members of the board of directors are all bishops and the bishops appoint pastors and relieve them of their appointments when necessary; that the president calls regional conventions for the purpose of fellowship and when necessary to discuss the *599 Church affairs. He then furnished a copy of a circular invitation which he said was sent out to ‘1 all Bishops, Elders, Pastors and the rest of the Congregation” to attend the regional convention at Tulare on October 16th, 17th and 18th. This invitation concludes with the expression: “We supplicate the different groups to take an interest in preparing, . . . this glorious feast, spiritual feast.”

The constitution and by-laws of the Church corporation were received in evidence. They provide, in part, that “The amount that should be contributed by each member of the Apostolic Church shall be at least a tenth part of his earnings or possessions . . .”; and that “the Bishops, Elders, Pastors and other Ministers shall be supported from the ninety (90) per cent that is left in the Church.” It is then provided that mission churches may be organized by the defendant Church corporation; that “in the conventions all the churches shall be represented by the pastors, but when, through unforeseen events the pastor cannot attend he shall appoint or delegate an assistant pastor or an ordained deacon”; “the assistants of the pastors are those ministers who occupy the second place in the government of the local church and in the absence of the pastors, and with the previous authorization by them, will be able to carry out the same functions.” Although Valdez, the pastor who was ill at the time, testified he did not delegate anyone to appear for him at the convention and at the conference, this testimony might be overcome by other evidence.

A Mr. Gaylord, testifying for plaintiffs, said he and Mr. Vind called on the witness Cota at a church in Tulare and Cota told them Arias was a representative of the church of Sanger, the assistant pastor; that Vind suggested that Arias must have been drunk at the time he ran into plaintiffs’ ear because he crossed over the center line of the highway and collided with it; that Cota stated Arias was not drunk and was not a drinking man; that Cota then showed him some paper bearing Arias’s name and said: “This is why Arias was coming to Tulare . . . this is his authorization ... to appear ... to come and attend this meeting ... to represent the Sanger Church”; that the paper contained the signatures of certain individuals and the seal of the Church corporation. He then testified they interviewed Arias, who lived in the pastor’s home in Sanger; that they discussed the amount of plaintiffs’ injuries and expenses and Arias told them he received a small amount of money from the Sanger *600 church and had to hold a job on the outside in order to live; that he explained the absence of the regular minister on October 17th when he was on his way to Tulare to attend the Church meeting. Plaintiff Vind corroborated this testimony and said Arias told him he worked full time for the Sanger church as assistant pastor and received pay for it; that after showing him his injuries and telling him he was unable to work, Arias offered to turn his car over to plaintiff as part payment but he told Arias this would not be sufficient since he earned $13,000 a year; that he told Arias to talk it over with the officials of the Church, which he agreed to do, and let him know; that he then gave Arias his address and left, and that no correspondence was received from him or them. Arias pleaded guilty to the violation of section 525 of the Vehicle Code. A process server served Arias at the Frosty Food plant with the complaint in this action. He testified Arias said that he carried some insurance on the car but found he did not have the kind that would cover him on this accident; that he “was going to Tulare to attend a meeting for our Church”; that he was studying to be a pastor and was going to Tulare to “represent the Church.” A traffic officer at the scene said he interviewed Arias and found a Bible on the seat and he believed he told the officer he was going to Tulare to preach or something connected with church work. The witness Cota and defendant Arias denied generally the wording of these purported conversations.

The president of the defendant Church testified generally as to its general laws and rights and said the corporation appoints the several pastors, owns the churches, and the pastors and their assistants, including ordained deacons, control the government of the Church, locally (which is autonomous); that he never authorized, appointed nor ordained Arias pastor of that Church to act for the corporation, and he knew he received no compensation. One of defendants’ witnesses did testify that Arias did occupy part of the Sanger church premises, rent free, for over two years.

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Bluebook (online)
307 P.2d 85, 148 Cal. App. 2d 597, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vind-v-asamblea-apostolica-de-la-fe-en-christo-jesus-calctapp-1957.