DocketNumber: L.A. No. 472.
Citation Numbers: 60 P. 928, 128 Cal. 340, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 600
Judges: Chipman
Filed Date: 4/6/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Action for personal injury. Trial by a jury and verdict for defendant. The court subsequently, on its own motion, made an order setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial, from which plaintiff appeals. The action was brought against Simona Bradbury individually and against her and two others as trustees under the will of L.L. Bradbury, deceased, the husband of Simona. At the trial a dismissal was entered as to the trustees. *Page 343
The verdict was rendered on the twenty-third day of June, 1897, and an order was made granting a stay of proceedings until the further order of the court. Subsequently, on July 21, 1897, the court on its own motion, in the absence of the parties, made the following order: "There having been such plain disregard by the jury of the instructions of the court and the evidence in this case as to satisfy the court that the verdict herein was rendered under a misapprehension of the instructions of the court, it is therefore ordered by the court, of its own motion, that the verdict heretofore rendered herein be set aside, and that a new trial be granted." The order was made under the power given by section
Upon the remaining question the inquiry here is the same as was in Townley v. Adams,
The written opinion of the court in support of its order is printed in the transcript. From it and from the statements of counsel for both parties it appears that the order is based upon an alleged misapprehension by the jury of the following instruction given by the court: "The mother of the child is not responsible for the torts of such child, and if you find from such evidence that Lewis L. Bradbury caused the excavation to be made into which the plaintiff stepped, as alleged by her, and that defendant Simona M. Bradbury did not authorize such excavation to be made, and did not know of its existence until after the injury, then your verdict should be for the defendant." In the opinion referred to the court said: "This is the correct rule of law, but I have no doubt that the jury was misled by it, and that they did not attach due importance to the qualifying words, ``and was not authorized by her.'" Defendant occupied the premises situated on Court street, Los Angeles, of which she was part owner in her own right; no question arises as to her control of the household and servants there employed. During her absence, and without her knowledge or direction or consent, her gardener dug three holes in the sidewalk, near the curb, on Court street, for the purpose of planting orange trees therein; he was directed to do this by defendant's son Lewis, a boy then aged thirteen years; no other direct authority was given the gardener; these holes were left open for about a week; on the night of the accident plaintiff, with some friends, passed *Page 345 along the sidewalk to a driveway leading into defendant's premises where they halted a moment, one of the party desiring to cross the street at that point to her home; they walked along this driveway to a point near the curb where this lady left the others, and plaintiff, turning to go to her home, stepped into one of these holes and was injured; no question is raised as to any fault on her part, and the evidence bearing upon her contributory negligence need not be noticed.
The evidence as to the gardener's authority to have this particular work done is indirect and inferential, while it appears by the uncontradicted testimony of the witnesses that his only direct authority came solely from defendant's minor son. He testified, being when he testified sixteen years old: "I told the gardener to make them [the holes]. I concluded I wanted some trees planted there. I had no consultation with my mother about it. I did it of my own volition, acting independent of her. I had no authority from my mother to direct the gardener. . . . I was not managing the place in my mother's absence. . . . My mother never suggested such a thing. The gardener suggested the idea himself, and I acted on his suggestion and gave him the authority to do it." The gardener was not called as a witness.
The witness Houston, defendant's coachman, testified that the gardener, Herman Frantz, dug the holes; that Frantz had been working for defendant for some time, but he, witness, had no "supervision over him at all." Speaking for himself, he testified that he occasionally transplanted trees in the garden; that he did anything that was required of him. "When Mrs. Bradbury was away I suppose some of the family were in charge of the home — Mrs Winston [defendant's daughter], or some of the rest. I do not know who was in charge during the month of October, 1894, when Mrs. Bradbury was away. . . . Mrs. Winston was there. The young ladies were there and the youngest boy. . . . I did what any one of them told me to do." Mrs. Bradbury [defendant] testified: "I knew nothing of the excavations that have been referred to in this case because I was away. I did not authorize anybody to make them, and did not know that they were made. No one on the premises had any authority to make them in my behalf." She further testified that trees *Page 346 had been set out on the sidewalk in her husband's lifetime, while Frantz was in their employ; that she did not allow Frantz to do whatever he pleased; when at home he did not do anything except by her direction; "sometimes he does a good many things without saying anything to me. I do not know why he planted the trees in the sidewalk where Miss Mizener was injured. He did it without my consent; as I said I was in San Francisco. The holes were dug after I went away and before I returned. His duties were to plant different plants and trim the grass"; that he needed no permission to transplant a rose bush from one part of the garden to another; "I would sometimes allow him to take up a tree from one part of the garden and carry it to another part of the garden, and sometimes not. I did not submit to his judgment in matters of that kind. When I was not present he did whatever he thought best. . . . He worked while I was gone, and did whatever he thought advisable to do — whatever he thought best." This is substantially all the evidence bearing upon the question of the gardener's authority. The court, not only in the instruction quoted but in others, referred to the liability of defendant for the wrongful or negligent act of the servant committed while in the master's service and within the scope of his employment, so that it cannot be said that the jury were uninstructed on the subject. It may be that if the jury had thought the evidence sufficient to justify them in finding that the gardener had authority from defendant to dig these holes, and the court had refused defendant a new trial, we could not, under the rule as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, interfere. But it by no means follows that the evidence plainly and palpably showed that the gardener had authority, and that therefore the jury grossly disregarded both the evidence and the instructions of the court. We do not wish to be understood as intimating whether the court would or would not be authorized to grant a new trial upon the showing made, for no such question is presented. We hold only that it is not shown that the jury plainly, palpably, grossly disregarded the instructions given; and it is not shown that the jury in like manner so disregarded the evidence as to indicate that their verdict was rendered under the influence of passion *Page 347 or prejudice. Under the circumstances disclosed by the record we think the aggrieved party should have been left to his remedy under a motion for a new trial, and therefore advise that the order be reversed.
Gray, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order is reversed. McFarland, J., Henshaw, J., Temple, J.
Hearing in Bank denied.