Canfield v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

Gill, J.

This is an action for damages because of an assault on the plaintiff’s person, committed by defendant Pox, December 22, 1892, at Altmont station, in Davies county, -on the line of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway. At the trial below there was a verdict and judgment for $2,000 against all the defendants and they have appealed.

The material facts are undisputed. For some time prior to December 8, 1892, plaintiff, Canfield, had been in the employ of the Rock Island Railway Company as ticket agent and telegraph operator at Cameron, Missouri . During the time, too, and since, defendant Cook was assistant general superintendent of the line, defend*360ant Tinsman was chief train dispatcher, while Eox was a brakeman.

On said December 8, 1892, Canfield, as a member of the “Order of Railway Telegraphers,” engaged in a “strike” and left the employment of the railway company. These strikers had been annoying the railroad company by visiting its stations and inducing the telegraph operators,- not connected with the O. R. T., to join them and leave the service of the company. To obviate this, Assistant Superintendent Cook, detailed Eox, the brakeman, and sent him out on the road to watch for these strikers, and when any were found meddling with the operators he, Fox, was authorized to drive them off, or expel them from the company’s offices. Eox had been a prize fighter in Iowa, which it was supposed qualified him for the work assigned. His duties were succinctly stated in the following question and answer given at the trial:

“Q. Then your duties were to prevent such persons as you might determine in your own way as to belong to the Order of Telegraphers, or was talking improperly with any of defendant’s operators, from so doing, were they not? A. Yes, sir; and, if necessary in my opinion, to resort to force to prevent any such persons from talking to defendant’s operators or visiting the private offices.”

On December 22, Canfield appeared at Altamont • station, and his purpose was, very clearly, to induce the operator there to join the O. R. T. and go out on the strike. As to what occurred there, he and Eox disagree, in some minor particulars. Canfield sa^s he was standing in the public waiting room talking to the agent when the assault was made. “I was,” he testified, “talking there when this man (referring to Fox) came up and either touched me on the shoulder, or I *361heard a step. I didn’t think anything about it. I turned to see who it was. As I turned he struck me with one hand; he had a gun in the other drawn on me. He says, “Take that you - of an O. R. T. man; get out of here.’ ” The witness then proceeds to detail his injuries; that he left the depot, etc.

Eox, after saying that he found Canfield in the private office of the company talking to the operator about the strike, etc., thus details the circumstances of the assault:

“Q. Did you speak to Canfield while he was in that private office? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. What did you say to him? A. I asked him what business he had in there.

ilQ. What did he answer, if anything. A. He didn’t answer anything; he just stood and looked at me.

“Q. Was that before or after this ‘scab’ talk he had with the operator? A. It was afterwards.

“Q. Did you say anything more to him? A. I told him to get out.

“Q. Well, what did he do? A. He didn’t say anything; he didn’t go.

“Q. What did you do? A. I hit him.

“Q. How often, whereabouts and what with. A. I hit him with my fist once alongside of the nose.

ltQ. Did you knock him down? A. No, sir; he staggered up against the bill press that was standing there.

“Q. Did you do or say anything else to him? A. I told him to clear out of there and let these operators alone.

“Q. Did he go then? A. Yes, sir.”

1. Counsel for defendants have devoted much of their brief and argument to alleged erroneous instructions given by the trial court. As we view it a dis*362cussion of these is unnecessary, except, it maybe, as to the measure of damages. For, in our opinion, the evidence, considered in the most favorable aspect for the defendants, makes a clear case for damages against Fox and the railway company, whose servant he (Fox) was; while it fails in toto to fasten any liability on defendants Oook and Tinsman.

That Fox committed a legal outrage on the plaintiff, and for which he is bound to respond in damages, can not be denied. The assault can not be justified under the law, even admitting the facts to be as he (Fox) relates them. Assume it to be true that Canfield had wrongfully invaded the privacy of the railroad office, and was wrongfully interfering with the company’s employees in the discharge of their duties, and yet his, Fox’s, conduct was unwarranted. He asked Canfield what he was doing there, and ordered him out; says that Canfield simply stood still, said nothing, and looked at him (Fox). Thereupon, without more, he, Fox, struck Canfield in the face. If the plaintiff was intruding himself where he had no right to be, then Fox may have ordered him away and, if he refused, then Fox would have been justified in using such force as was reasonably necessary to expel him; but there was nothing in the circumstances to warrant this brutal assault.

As to the defendant railway company, it was clearly liable for the assault, because the same was committed by its agent or servant while in the performance of the work entrusted to him. It is now the well settled rule, “that the master is liable for all acts committed by his servant, whether unlawful or not, that are within the scope of the authority conferred upon him by the master either expressly or by fair implication.” Wood on Master & Servant, sec. 309. See, also, Boogher v. Life Ass’n, 75 Mo. 319, 324; *363Snyder v. Railroad, 60 Mo. 413; Lynch v. Railroad, 90 N. Y. 77; Evansville, etc., R’y Co. v. KcKee, 99 Ind. 519. The language used in the ease last cited is pertinent here: “A corporation which selects an agent and gives him charge of a special department of its affairs is responsible for the acts of the agent performed while engaged in the line of his duties, although the particular act may not have been authorized. This responsibility is not confined to acts rightfully performed, but extends to such as are wrongfully done.. The test of responsibility is not, whether the particular act was rightfully done and specifically authorized, but whether it was within the scope of the agent’s authority.” Here the proof (coming too from the sworn statements of the railroad superintendent) is that Fox “was instructed to keep them (the strikers) out of our offices, and to order them out if they went in—not only to order them out, but to put them out, and if heces-' sary to use physical force, the watchman to be his own judge about that part of it.” I repeat this testimony to show that this man Fox was entrusted by his employer with large discretion as to the manner of performing his duties. What he did, then, was the act of his employer, his trespasses while in the performance of these duties were the trespasses of the railway company, and for injuries flowing therefrom it must be responsible.

We hold, then, that, under the testimony considered in its most favorable light for the defense, a clear case was made against the defendants, Fox and Eailway Company. The servant while in the performance of the master’s work which had been entrusted to him wrongfully assaulted a third person; and for this tort either or both are liable in damages, and both may be joined in the same suit. Wharton on Agency, sec. 546; Wood on Master and Servant, sec. 325.

*3642. But we know of no principal of law that will impose a liability on defendants Cook and Tinsman for this assault. The sum and substance of their offending seems to be that they, having in charge the business of the railroad company and acting as its agents— the one as assistant superintendent and the other as general train dispatcher—employed Fox. There is nothing in the evidence tending to inculpate them in the wrong committed. They were not present aiding or abetting Fox, nor is there anything here to show that they advised the commission of any wrong. The most that can be said of these agents is that, acting for their corporate principal, they engaged this man Fox to visit the different stations along the road and keep the striking operators out of the company’s private offices, so that the employees of the company would not be disturbed in the transaction of its business. This was, in itself, lawful. The wrong consisted in the manner in which this subagent performed the duties assigned him—not that he engaged in a work unlawful of itself. While these strikers had an undoubted right to quit the service of the defendant company, they yet had no right to intrude themselves into its private offices and interfere with the work of others who had taken the places which they (the strikers) had vacated. As to the liability of an agent under these circumstances, an eminent author says: “No action will ordinarily lie against an agent for the misfeasance, or for the negligence of those whom he has retained for the service of his principal by his consent or authority, any more than it will lie against a servant who hires laborers for his master at his request, for their acts; unless, indeed, in either case, the particular acts which occasion the damage are done by the orders or directions of such agent or servant. The action, under othér circumstances, must Be brought *365either against the principal or against the immediate actors in the wrong.” Story on Agency [9 Ed.], sec. 313.

3. Counsel for defendants further assail the judgment on account of the damages awarded—objections being taken both as to the instruction -in that behalf, as well as the amount of the verdict. At plaintiff’s instance, the court told the jury, “that in assessing plaintiff’s damages, if they find for him, they are not limited to the physical injury inflicted, or shame, humiliation or disgrace caused plaintiff (if any), by said acts and conduct of said Fox, but they may, in addition thereto, if they find the assault of plaintiff by said Fox was wanton and malicious (and, by the term malicious, is not meant spite or ill will, but the intentional doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse), they may allow such further damages, known in law as exemplary, as will be a punishment to defendant and a wholesome warning to others, in all not to exceed, however, $2,000.”

After a careful consideration of the argument of defendant’s counsel, we fail to discover, either in the form of this instruction or in the extent of the damages awarded, any substantial error. In actions of this nature, the conduct and motives of the defendant are always open to inquiry in determining the amount of damages. “If in committing the wrong complained of he acted recklessly, oppressively, insultingly or wilfully and maliciously, with a design to oppress and injure, the jury, in fixing the damages, may disregard the rule of mere compensation; and beyond that, may, as a punishment of the defendant, and as a protection to society against the violation of personal right and social order, award such additional damages as' in their discretion they may deem proper.” 1 Sutherland on Damages [2 Ed.], sec. 392.

*366The amount, too, of such punitive damages is always left to the jury, as the degree of punishment to be thus inflicted must depend on the peculiar circumstances of each case. Verdicts, however, in these cases will be reviewed by the courts; and if it appears manifest that the amount is grossly excessive, that, is, so large as to carry conviction that the jury was controlled by passion or prejudice, then the verdict should not be allowed to stand. But under this rule we are not prepared to condemn the verdict. If the facts were as related by the plaintiff (and of this the jury were the sole judges), then the conduct of Pox was most oppressive, insulting, wanton and malicious. According to plaintiff’s testimony, he was standing in the public waiting room of the station, when Pox approached him from the rear, touched him or called his attention, and without more, struck the plaintiff in the face, causing the blood to flow, and accompanying the blow with vile oaths and a threatening display of a revolver. So, too, is the defendant railway company liable in exemplary damages for the wanton and malicious conduct of its servant Pox, which was done and performed within the scope of his employment, and that, too, regardless of any prior command to do the act, or subsequent ratification thereof. Haehl v. Railroad, 119 Mo. 325.

After a patient consideration of all the points made in brief, we discover no substantial reason for disturbing the judgment as to defendants Pox and the railway company. We, then, affirm the judgment as to said defendants;- but, for reasons already expressed, the judgment as to defendants Cook and Tinsman will be reversed.

All concur.