Shumate v. Vet's Cab, Inc.
Shumate v. Vet's Cab, Inc.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff brought this action in the district court of Sedgwick County to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him in a fight with William Anderson, whom he named as defendant, which fight occurred in the breakfast nook of the dining room of plaintiff’s landlady. He joined as defendant the Vet’s Cab, Inc., hereinafter called the Cab Company, as being jointly liable with Anderson. A jury trial resulted in judgment for plaintiff against both defendants for $7,500. The Cab Company alone has appealed.
The facts disclosed by the record may be summarized as follows: Plaintiff, a single man 35 years of age and employed by the Kansas Gas and Electric Company in its maintenance department, was living at 2412 East First Street where he roomed and boarded with Mrs. Larkin, his landlady. About 8:00 o’clock on the morning of January 1, 1953, he called the Cab Company for a cab to go visit his friend, a Mr. Campbell who lived at 2042 North Market. Anderson, who was the cab driver, responded to the call. Plaintiff appeared and asked Anderson to wait a few minutes for his landlady who was going with him. He remarked that he wanted to visit a friend and take him a drink of whiskey, Anderson said it was New Year’s Morning and he wouldn’t mind having a drink himself, “so I gave him one.” Plaintiff had the whiskey with him, Anderson had no whiskey. Anderson drove the cab to the Campbell home.
“Q. And isn’t it true all the injuries and damage you complain of, occurred in the private residence away from the taxicab? A. That is right.”
The record further disclosed that the Cab Company’s arrangement with each driver was that the driver was an individual operator in business for himself. The Cab Company provided, for a certain fee, a radio, switchboard service, and liability insurance to protect persons against accidents and injuries while they were in the cab.
When the matter of insurance was mentioned the question was
The fee the driver pays to the Cab Company is a certain amount for every shift. It is a set fee without regard to what the driver makes. The driver makes no accounting to the Cab Company for his fares. The cab driver must first get a chauffeur’s license from the state and then get a driver’s license or permit to drive the cab from the police department. An officer of the police department checks each applicant for the City’s License as to his eligibility and gives him an examination on traffic rules and regulations, an eye test, makes inquiry of him concerning his past record, and if he passes all the tests and his record is satisfactory they issue to him a temporary permit to drive a taxi. After 21 days they check the driver’s record to see how he is getting along and if he is doing well they issue to him a City Taxicab Driver’s License. The officer testified that this was done with Anderson and the temporary permit was issued to him on September 15, 1952. In getting information from him they take his fingerprints and submit them to the F. E. I. On October 6,1952, they received the F. E. I. report which disclosed his previous criminal record; that in 1940 and ’41 he had been arrested for vagrancy and some other misdemeanors in California; that in 1948 he had served time in the Missouri penitentiary upon a conviction or plea of guilty of felonious assault. It was the practice of the police department of Wichita that if a man’s criminal record was as much as 3 or 4 years old and nothing against him in the meantime they would give him a permit to drive a cab and see if he could rehabilitate himself. This criminal record was never reported to the Cab Company. The manager of the Cab Company relied upon the investigation and report made of the applicant. In the trial of this case plaintiff introduced this F. R. I. record and the court admitted it over the objection of the Cab Company. There was no adverse record of Anderson in Wichita. He was married in Wichita about two years before the trial. His wife was a typist at
In the petition plaintifE alleged that Anderson had the reputation of being a belligerent, quarrelsome, bullying type of individual and consistently engaged in the use of abusive language and physical abuse; and, that this was known to the Cab Company. There was no evidence to support that claim other than the F. B. I. report. The petition further alleged:
“That the defendant William Anderson is a resident of Sedgwick County, Kansas, and his post office address is . . . Wichita, Kansas. That on the 1st day of January, 1953, he was an employee, agent and servant of the defendant Vet’s Cab, Inc., and in all matters and things that he did do, say, act and perform. . . .”
The Cab Company specifically denied this allegation of plaintiff in its verified answer. The reply to that answer was an unverified general denial.
Counsel for appellee in their brief say: “In Mutual Combat Each May Recover from the Other for All Injuries Received from the Other in the Fight.” citing McCulloch v. Goodrich, 105 Kan. 1, 181 Pac. 556. The point is not important here. The evidence shows no agreement to fight such as was in McNeil v. Mullin, 70 Kan. 634, 79 Pac. 168, or Teeters v. Frost, 145 Okla. 273, 292 Pac. 356. See, also, 6 C. J. S., p. 806. In Taylor v. Commonwealth, 281 Ky. 442, 136 S. W. 2d 544, it was held: “A mutual affray’ or ‘combat’ justifying a qualifying instruction on self-defense is a fight in which both parties willingly enter and is similar to a duel.” (¶ 2.) See, also, definition of “Mutual Combat” in Words and Phrases, Permanent Edition.
The time the fight between Anderson and plaintiff occurred is not definitely stated. Mrs. Larkin testified that it was soon after the men sat down at the table. She also testified soon after the fight she called the "taxicab company and reported there had been trouble at her place, giving the address, which she didn’t want to discuss over the telephone. Mr. Harris of the Cab Company went to her home immediately and talked with her. He testified that Anderson’s cab was still in the alley; that he couldn’t take it away then because he was alone; that he went back to the cab office and called a man to go with him and returned to Mrs. Larkin’s place,
In this court counsel for appellant cite cases on the relation of principal and agent, which, under the facts in this case, would tend to prove no liability of the Cab Company. In this court counsel for appellee say:
“Defendant Cab Company is Liable for Driver Anderson’s Wrongs not as a Master but as a Common Carrier With a Duty to Protect Its Passengers from Assault or Wrongful Conduct of the Servant.
“Appellant in their brief rely upon the Master and Servant cases involving tortious acts of servant in noncommon carrier cases. Their argument and authorities are not in point and are not to be relied upon.”
Having abandoned the thought of liability of the Cab Company upon the law relating to master and servant, appellee contends the Cab Company is liable under the doctrine applying to carriers of passengers, citing the case of Korner v. Cosgrove (1923), 108 Ohio St. 484, 141 N. E. 267, 31 A. L. R. 1193. This doctrine is not new. There are at least five annotations on the subject in A. L. R: 4 A. L. R. 1499; 31 A. L. R. 1202; 45 A. L. R. 297; 69 A. L. R. 980; and, 96 A. L. R. 727. Many cases are cited under each annotation. None of them would give comfort to the appellee. The relation between a common carrier of persons and the passengers originated in contract. For railroads a passenger buys a ticket in advance but with taxies the passenger calls or hails the taxi and when it appears gets in the taxi and advises the driver where he wants to go and pays at the end of the journey. Both the railroad and the taxi company agree to convey the passenger to his destination, to treat him courteously, and to permit no harm to come to him by any employee of the railroad company or the taxi company or from other persons, so far as practicable, and to deliver him safely to his destination. When he is delivered safely and permitted to get out of the railroad car or taxi the contract is finished. In this case, according to the testimony of plaintiff and his landlady, the contract by which the Cab Company and Anderson undertook to transport plaintiff and his landlady from the Campbell home to Mrs. Larkin’s rooming house was completed with safety. Anderson handled his car “perfectly.” Plaintiff was not hurt while he was getting in the taxi or
At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the defendant Cab Company filed a demurrer thereto on the grounds that the evidence was not sufficient to establish any liability against it. This demurrer was overruled. We think it should have been sustained for it is clear from the evidence that the contract of transportation of plaintiff and Mrs. Larkin from the Campbell home to Mrs. Larkin’s rooming house had been fully completed sometime prior to the fight between Anderson and the plaintiff. In view of this conclusion it is not necessary to treat other questions raised by the appellant. From this it follows that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed with directions to sustain the demurrer of the Cab Company to the evidence, and render judgment in its favor. It is so ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Marvin Shumate v. Vet's Cab, Inc.
- Status
- Published