Vogel v. Nash-Finch Co.

265 N.W. 350, 196 Minn. 509, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 997
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 28, 1936
DocketNo. 30,598.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 265 N.W. 350 (Vogel v. Nash-Finch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogel v. Nash-Finch Co., 265 N.W. 350, 196 Minn. 509, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 997 (Mich. 1936).

Opinions

1 Reported in 265 N.W. 350. Plaintiff obtained a verdict against defendant for the wrongful death of her intestate, Joseph W. Vogel, her husband. Defendant *Page 510 appeals from the order denying its motion in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial.

Defendant's main contentions are: (a) That if the negligence of Fred Johnson, defendant's servant, was the proximate cause of Vogel's death, such negligence was conclusively shown to have occurred outside the scope of Johnson's employment; and (b) Vogel's contributory negligence appears as a matter of law. If either proposition is correct defendant is entitled to judgment notwithstanding the verdict for it moved for a directed verdict.

The defendant does not contend that the evidence did not justify the jury in finding that the negligence of Johnson proximately caused or contributed to cause Vogel's death; but it insists that the evidence is conclusive that when Vogel received his fatal injury Johnson was not within the scope of his employment and was not engaged in furthering defendant's business. The evidence viewed in a light favorable to plaintiffs' contention may be thus stated:

Defendant wholesales merchandise by means of traveling salesmen. One of these was Fred Johnson. He provided his own car but was paid four cents per mile traveled. He started from defendant's wholesale house at Crookston Monday mornings with a stock of goods of the value of from $300 to $400 and called on the trade in his territory, which extended on trunk highway No. 32 to Warroad, usually returning by Wednesday night. Defendant's manager at Crookston testified: "Each salesman, in addition to salary, is paid actual expenses for room and board and mileage for his car; while I fix the territory, the route and schedule followed therein by the salesmen are left to the salesmen." The Warroad trip included the villages of Holt, Middle River, Strathcona, Greenbush, and Warroad. He would sell and deliver to his customers from the stock he carried in addition to taking orders for delivery by other means. Johnson had been on this route some three years prior to Monday, July 16, 1934. Before the Hallquist hotel at Middle River burned he stayed there Monday nights. Strathcona, nine miles north of Middle River, was usually visited during the afternoon or evening, Johnson returning to Middle River for the night, so that in the mornings he could pass on north without *Page 511 stopping at Strathcona. There was no hotel at the latter place. After the Hallquist hotel burned he generally stopped at Greenbush, nine miles north of Strathcona, where the hotelkeeper registered a room for him for Monday nights. Mrs. Hallquist had rebuilt her hotel at Middle River. Both Vogel and Johnson had supper there on July 16, 1934. The rooms appear to have been ready, with the exception of electric lights. Johnson had seen them and had selected a room, but made no arrangement for that Monday night. Some time after supper he promised to call oil a customer at Strathcona that evening. On this trip he also had with him one Sherwin, a salesman for another wholesale concern. Vogel was also a traveling salesman, who on his trip, driving a Buick coupe, had reached Middle River. Vogel and Johnson were acquainted. Johnson considered himself a singer. About nine o'clock he saw Katherine Hjertos, a young woman of Middle River, whom he knew to be a singer, and one Miss Anderson, walking by the post office. He hailed them and then took them to Vogel and Sherwin and introductions were had. Johnson proposed singing. The young ladies did not think it proper to sing outdoors within the village limits. The five were thereupon taken in Vogel's car about a mile and a half outside the village, where singing was indulged in for about an hour, and then they returned to the village. Johnson thereupon suggested going to Strathcona. The others consented. Johnson took his car, a sedan, and with him rode Sherwin and Miss Hjertos. Vogel with Miss Anderson followed in the Buick. When they arrived at Strathcona at 11:30, Johnson's customer, who had requested a call, had retired; but Johnson saw another customer on the street, who opened his place and all entered. There is some evidence that Johnson tried to sell him some goods, but the customer concluded that he needed none. The party had three or four glasses of 3.2 beer each, remaining in the place about an hour, then started back for Middle River, Johnson leaving three or four minutes ahead. About two miles south of Strathcona he stopped, stepped out of the left front door and walked slowly to the rear, with his arm extended. Sherwin stepped out on the right side and walked to the rear. He claims that he walked some 18 *Page 512 feet to the Year of the car, then, seeing the Buick approaching at great speed, he jumped into the westerly ditch. Miss Anderson, testifying that she was looking ahead, saw neither Johnson, nor his car, nor its taillight until within 30 feet thereof, when Johnson stepped out toward the center of the road, At the same time Vogel applied the brakes and swerved to the left, but too late. Johnson was struck and burled or dragged toward the easterly ditch, into which ditch went the Buick car, the left front wheel coming up to the top of the four-foot easterly bank of the ditch. Miss Anderson received minor injuries. Johnson's car was driven forward and into the westerly ditch. Miss Hjertos, who had remained in the front seat of the Johnson car, was not injured. She and Sherwin went to a near farmhouse for aid and called a doctor. When the doctor arrived Vogel was near death and expired before brought to Middle River.

The testimony of defendant's manager that Johnson had complete freedom as to his working schedule; that he could call on the trade at the convenience of himself and customers — on stores chiefly in daytime, on drink and amusement places during evenings; together with the undisputed facts that he was upon the road and territory assigned to him and had the goods of defendant for sale in his car; that he went to Strathcona this night to sell defendant's goods to a customer who had requested Johnson to call; and that he usually made Strathcona on Monday evenings should be evidence enough to carry the question to the jury as to whether Johnson was within the scope of his employment when Vogel met his death. Of course there is also a basis for finding that Johnson had wholly abandoned his employer's business and was solely in the pursuit of his own desires on the trip to Strathcona and back. But as we read the evidence it cannot be said as a matter of law that he had done so. Defendant does not contend that if Johnson stopped his car in the lane of travel and took a position in the rear thereof so as to hide the taillight from a following car, as the jury could find, the conclusion was not justifiable that he was negligent and that such negligence proximately caused Vogel's death. Defendant calls attention to McCarty v. Twin City E. P. Assn. *Page 513 172 Minn. 551, 216 N.W. 239, an industrial accident claim, but it is to be noted that the triers of fact there found that the employe was not within the course of his employment when injured. Loucks v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. 188 Minn. 182,246 N.W. 893

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Vogel v. Nash-Finch Co.
265 N.W. 350 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 N.W. 350, 196 Minn. 509, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogel-v-nash-finch-co-minn-1936.