Jones v. Southern Ry. Co.
Decision Date | 12 October 1916 |
Docket Number | 9539. |
Citation | 90 S.E. 183,106 S.C. 20 |
Parties | JONES v. SOUTHERN RY. CO. ET AL. |
Court | South Carolina Supreme Court |
Appeal from Common Pleas Circuit Court of Edgefield County; Thos. S Sease, Judge.
Action by E. Pendleton Jones, Jr., against the Southern Railway Company and others. Judgment for plaintiff, and the company appeals. Reversed.
N. G Evans and S. M. Smith, both of Edgefield, for appellant.
J. Wm Thurmond and Sheppard Bros., all of Edgefield, for respondent.
Plaintiff sued the railway company and three of its agents and servants, Shealey, Parks, and Gilliard, for damages caused him by the bite of a cat which was allowed to be on the company's premises while he was there attending to business with the company. He alleged that the cat was known by defendants to be vicious, having previously bitten others also, that it had rabies, when it bit him, and, in consequence, he suffered the administration of Pasteur's treatment for the prevention of hydrophobia. The court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant Shealey, and instructed the jury that they might find for or against any or all the other defendants. The jury returned a verdict for $750 against the company alone.
Under the recent decisions in Sparks v. Railroad Co., 104 S.C. 266, 88 S.E. 739, and Jenkins v. Railroad Co., 89 S.C. 408, 71 S.E. 1010, the verdict is illogical and cannot stand, as no delict of the company was proved other than through and by the agency of Parks and Gilliard, one or both. The company's liability is predicated solely upon the acts or omissions of one or both of them; and if neither of them is liable, it necessarily follows that the company is not. It would be unreasonable to say that the servant did no wrong, but, nevertheless, his master is liable, when the only wrong charged against the master is that of the servant.
There is another reason why the verdict cannot be sustained. The company's liability is predicated solely upon the conduct of its servants under the doctrine respondeat superior; and under the facts and circumstances proved, if the company is liable to plaintiff, the servant or servants whose wrongful acts or omissions actually caused the injury are liable over to the company for the amount which it will be compelled to pay on account thereof. But, as the verdict acquits both the servants of having done any wrong, the company is deprived of its remedy against the...
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