100 P.2d 461 | Okla. | 1940
The owner of an automobile permitted its use by one whom he knew to be a careless and reckless driver. The driver, who it is conceded was not the servant of the owner, drove the car on the streets of Okmulgee and collided with plaintiff, who was on foot.
Plaintiff sued the owner and the driver jointly. The jury returned a verdict against the defendant owner, and made no report of any finding at all, one way or the other, as affecting the defendant driver. The owner excepted to the verdict, and also moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which motion was overruled. The trial judge rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the owner, and further finding that because of the jury's failure to find either for or against the driver, the jury intended for the plaintiff to take nothing against the driver. Accordingly, the court entered judgment in favor of the driver.
The owner appeals, making the plaintiff and the driver defendants in error. The plaintiff has not filed any cross-appeal, against her failure to obtain judgment against the driver.
The judgment was predicated upon the rule used in Coker v. Moose,
The proof of a case, even under the rule, entails the proof of four requisites, *28
according to the almost unanimous opinion of the courts and text-writers, and the fourth of said requirements is proof that plaintiff was injured by reason of the negligent operation of the automobile by the borrower. Jones v. Harris,
It must almost be self-evident that the said fourth requirement, set forth above, is a logical necessity. A complete perusal of the text-writers and reported decisions has failed to reveal any statement of the law or any decision fastening liability upon the owner in the absence of negligence of the driver contributing to the accident. Even the authorities quoted in plaintiff's brief recognize its necessity.
Plaintiff argues that negligence of the driver is unnecessary, that the instant judgment is not dependent upon the master and servant relationship, but that the negligence of the owner in intrusting the automobile to the driver is the negligence which is relied upon. Nevertheless, if an accident occurs in which the driver is not negligent, there is nocausal connection between the owner's precedent negligence and the injury itself. As stated in the Jones Case, supra, and in virtually all of the pronouncements of the rule, it is thecombined negligence of the owner and operator which fastens liability upon the owner. Otherwise the plaintiff's recovery would rest on no stronger basis than the "but for" doctrine. In spite of the absence of the master and servant relationship, the liability under the present rule, just as under the master and servant rule, is dependent. Dependent because negligence of the driver must exist, in order to provide a causal connection between the injury and the bailment. In Gerritsen v. City of Seattle,
"It is closely related to the question of res adjudicata, and is governed by the same principle. Where there has been litigation which has in fact determined the point in controversy, and there has been a final judgment, that judgment is conclusive. Where the subject matter is identical, and the evidence is of necessity the same, the question cannot be reopened. * * * It is manifest here that, as the defendants, the Puritan Restaurant, have been acquitted of any actionable negligence out of which the injury of the plaintiff arose, the city of Norfolk cannot be held liable therefor, because its liability is derivative, and under the facts of this case depends upon the alleged specific negligence of the Puritan Restaurant. This issue having been judicially determined adversely to the plaintiff, the city is not liable for his injuries, which he alleges were thereby caused."
Strictly speaking, the liability is not derivative, — it is dependent. *29
A number of decisions involving similar or analogous situations, not involving the servant and master relationship, yet arriving at the result that dependent liability cannot be imposed in the face of exoneration of the defendant whose negligent acts are claimed to have been the immediate cause of plaintiff's injury, are cited in the Gerritsen Case (Wash.)
In the manner suggested by the Supreme Court of the United States, in a case, however, involving the master and servant relationship (New Orleans N.E. R. Co. v. Jopes (sic),
The only distinction readily occurring to the mind is that in a master and servant case the absence of the servant's negligence removes negligence entirely, while in cases using the rule in question, absence of the driver's negligence in the particular accident does not remove the owner's precedent negligence, if any, but does remove causal connection between that negligence and the injury.
Cases using the rule involving an owner's liability for loaning a car to one known to be reckless may be found in the American Digest System under the heading "Automobiles," Key Number 192 (11), 244 (25) and sometimes 195(3). Virtually all of them include negligence of the driver in the specific accident as one of the elements of the rule, and the necessity of its presence seems seldom to have been questioned; so seldom, in fact, that no subdivision on the question appears in any of the A. L. R. annotations, supra. The question was briefed, however, and expressly decided in Rush v. McDonnell,
"The injurious conduct of bailee of an automobile, resulting from his incompetence as a driver, is a necessary factor of owner's liability, without which wrongful bailment could not be said to be proximate cause of injuries. * * *
"We are not confusing the liability of the driver of the car, or of his principal, for the negligent operation of the car, with the liability of the owner or custodian of the car for intrusting its operation to an incompetent driver. The two phases of liability are separate and distinct, and in the latter case the liability is not based upon the doctrine of respondeat superior. Yet the injurious conduct of the bailee, resulting from his incompetency as a driver, is a necessary factor to the liability of the owner or custodian, without which the wrongful bailment could not be said to be the proximate cause of the injury. Hence any consideration of the owner's liability *30
must involve also a consideration of the conduct of the bailee and of his legal culpability. Parker v. Wilson,
The following is from 42 C. J. 1079, under the heading "Intrusting Vehicle to Incompetent Driver":
"This liability does not rest upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, but nevertheless the injurious conduct of the driver resulting from his incompetency is a necessary factor in the liability of the owner."
We conclude that if a third person is injured by the car while same is being driven in a careful and prudent manner by the driver, who is in no wise at fault, then there is no causal connection between the owner's prior negligence, if any, and the injury, and the owner is not liable.
It appears that the authorities are almost unanimous to the effect that in negligence actions, where the liability of one defendant is predicated solely on the culpability of a codefendant, and hence is dependent, a judgment in favor of the latter and against the former is erroneous and cannot stand.
Since in both master and servant cases and negligent bailment cases the liability is dependent upon the negligence of the servant or driver, master and servant cases considering whether release of the servant should release the master are largely in point in negligent bailment cases, insofar as the precise question which we are now considering is concerned. Therefore those cases may be considered, for the purpose of reasoning.
Where the master's liability is predicated solely on a servant's negligence, a judgment against the master, on a verdict finding against the master and in favor of the servant, is error, and such judgment cannot stand. Shell Petroleum Corporation v. Blair,
But where the liability of the master is not necessarily dependent, as in cases of the breach of a nondelegable duty, a judgment in favor of the servant does not release the master. Texas Co. v. Taylor,
Too, although the type of liability involved may necessarily be dependent, a judgment in favor of the servant does not relieve the master where, under the proof, the liability of the master did not arise solely by reason of the alleged negligence of the servant released by the judgment but arose by reason of the negligence of some other servant not released or affected by the judgment. Southern Kansas Stage Lines Co. v. Crain,
The jury should have been required to find one way or the other as to the driver or should have been discharged and a new trial ordered. The trial judge, however, rendered judgment for the defendant driver, and the plaintiff has not prosecuted any appeal or cross-appeal from that judgment. On the other hand, the defendant owner makes no complaint of said action by the trial judge; conversely, he contends that the jury and the judge were eminently correct in that respect because of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, if for no other reason.
Accordingly, the judgment must be reversed and the cause be remanded, with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff in error, and it is so ordered.
BAYLESS, C. J., and RILEY, CORN, GIBSON, and HURST, JJ., concur. WELCH, V. C. J., concurs in conclusion. OSBORN and DAVISON, JJ., absent. *31