delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for personal injury in which Byrd A. Robertson, hereafter ealled the plaintiff, has recovered $3,000.00 as damages against the Appalachian Power Company. It is claimed that the injury was caused by the negligence of one Conner, an employee of the company, for which it is responsible. Among the defenses made is that at the time of the occurrence Conner Vas not acting within the scope of his employment.
While the law upon this question appears to be simple, there has always been very great difficulty in its application, and it has been frequently said that it is impossible to state it briefly and comprehensively so as to be clearly applicable to all cases, because of the ever-varying facts and circumstances of particular eases.
It seems to us that one of the best statements on the subject is found in Morier v. St. Paul Ry. Co.,
In the note to Goodloe v. Memphis, etc., R. Co. (
In this case, so far as. the evidence relates to this particular point, there is no conflict, and therefore it presents a question of law for the court. Healey v. Cockrill,
In Winchester v. Carroll,
These are the undisputed facts showing the relation of Conner to the company at the time of the alleged act out of which it is claimed the liability arises:
The plaintiff was driving a single horse and wagon along a private roadway through an orchard to deliver his load. The company had a line of poles and wires across this roadway, and was restringing certain wires. In connection with this work three copper wires were lying on the ground across this private way when the plaintiff approached. About this time Conner, who was a laborer employed by the company, being a member of a certain gang working under the orders of a foreman named Carter, approached. His gang were then at work over a hill and out of sight several hundred yards away. Conner had been to his dinner and had not returned to his work. He had no orders or duties whatever with reference to these wires so lying on the ground. The plaintiff asked Conner whether he could drive over them, and Conner told him that he could not, but that he (Conner) would hold the wires up so as to-permit him to pass under them. They together proceeded to carry out this purpose. The horse was said to be a “high-headed” horse, and they found it difficult.
The evidence is in conflict as to why the horse, apparently under the plaintiff’s control, suddenly became frightened. According to Conner, the wires were passed safely over the horse’s head, the hames, the raised seat of the wagon and he was entirely free while running away. According to the plaintiff, after the wire struck the horse about the eyes, Conner jumped up and suddenly threw the wires on the horse’s neck and so caused Mm to run away. TMs is the negligence relied on to establish the liability.
These facts raise the vital question to which our at-' tention is directed. Was this laborer, Conner, acting within the scope of his employment when he attempted to assist the plaintiff in the manner indicated?
TMs evidence seems to be the slender thread upon wMch the case depends:
Carter, the foreman of the gang, having shown that Conner was a laborer and had no orders from Mm as to driving or leading the horse under these wires; that he (Carter) was not present; and that Conner worked under his direction, said this, referring to the work;
*460 “Q. For instance, if you tell a man to stretch a wire, you would not tell him how to take hold of it?
“A. I generally told them where to put it.
“Q. You told them where to put it, and then they went and put it?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Well, you certainly would have expected your men, or any of them, wouldn’t you, Mr. Carter, in the course of that work down there, to have done whatever was reasonably necessary to take care of the property? That was required, wasn’t it, of your men — they understood that?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. How far, at the time of the accident, was the gang of men that you were with away from the point of the accident?
“A. They were some four or five hundred feet across the hill, or maybe a little further.”
The case, then, is not like those cases in which the master has been held responsible, where the servant, during his working hours, went off on certain business of and for the master, from which without orders or against the orders of the master, he had deviated slightly for the purpose of attending to some business of his own. In such cases, the acts of the servant have generally been held to be within the scope of his employment. This man, Conner, at the time of the accident, was not engaged in any business for his master. It was during an intérmission in his work, his dinner hour, at a time when he was absolutely free from the control of his master, or Carter, under whose direct control he was employed to work. He had not returned but was on his way to his task to resume it under orders with the rest of the gang. • He had no orders at the time and being absent, the master had no control whatever-
It seems to us that Conner’s act was voluntary and merely an act of courtesy which any passer-by would have been likely to proffer. Having so volunteered, it became a joint enterprise of the plaintiff and Conner for the accomplishment of the special business of the plaintiff, which was not the business either of Conner or the company, and in that joint adventure the plaintiff himself was the principal. It was he who knew his horse; he who had control and direction of the horse and his movements; he was the chief actor, while Conner was his helper, acting in a matter having no relation to his employment as the servant of the company; and if there was any negligence it was the concurrent negligence of both.
As has been indicated, each case seems to present.
A typical case illustrating this is American Railway Express Co. v. Wright,
A case involving the same principle is Chesley v.
In Lloyd v. West Branch Bank (1850),
In Vandeymark v. Corbett (1909),
In Walker v. Hannibal & St. J. R. Co. (1894),
This is the rule which should be applied under the facts of tMs ease. Conner was off duty; he then had no responsibility whatever to his master at the time he ■agreed with the plaintiff, and for the plaintiff’s accommodation, to aid him in getting his horse under the wires; he was free from Ms master’s control.
Closely related to the rule that where the act is merely an act of courtesy to a third person, the master is not liable, is a line of cases which do not refer to the idea of courtesy, but deny the liability of the master when the act of Ms servant is a service performed at the •direction of and for a third person, and not for or under the direction of the master. Sawyer v. Martins,
In Olive v. Whitney Marble Co.,
r This rule was applied in Murphey v. Caralli, 5 Hurl. & C. 462, 34 L. J. Ex. 14, 10 Jur. (N. S.) 1207, 13 W. R. 165. There certain servants of the defendant negligently piled cotton in a warehouse, and an injury re-
In Rourke v. White Moss Colliery Co. (1877), L. R. 2 C. P. Div. 205, 46 L. J. C. P. 283, 35 L. T. (N. S.) 49,. 25 W. R. 263, it appeared that the defendants began sinking a shaft in their colliery, but thereafter agreed with Whittle to do the sinking and excavating at a certain price per yard, Whittle to find all the labor, but the defendants to provide and place at the disposal of Whittle the necessary machinery and an engineer to-work the engine (this engineer being employed and paid by the defendants), but both the engine and the engineer were to be under the control of Whittle. The-plaintiff in that case was employed and paid by Whittle, and while working at the bottom of the shaft was injured by the negligence of this engineer who was employed and paid by the defendants, but was under the control of Whittle. It was held that although this engineer remained the general servant of the defendants, yet because he was under the orders and control of Whittle at the time of the accident, he was then acting as the servant of Whittle and not of thé defendants,, who, therefore, were not liable for his negligence. Stone v. Hills,
It is said in Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, section 63, that “if the act be done while the servant is at-liberty from service, and pursuing his own ends, exclusively, there can be no question of the freedom from liability, even if the injury could not have been committed without facilities afforded to the servant by his relaxations to the master.”
This question was raised in the trial court, both by instructions and upon the motion to enter judgment in favor of the defendant, notwithstanding the verdict. The trial court took the. opposite view, and left the question as to whether or not Conner was acting within the scope of his employment to the jury. As we have indicated, we think that under the undisputed facts of this ease, Conner at the time of the injury was acting beyond the scope of his employment. The instructions granted were, therefore, erroneous, and the trial court should have set aside the verdict and entered judgment for the defendant. This court will correct the error, and enter judgment here, in accordance with the statute, for the defendant.
This conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the other questions presented by the record, all of which depend upon the fundamental question as to whether or not Conner was aetin" within the scope of his employment.
Reversed.
