118 Misc. 436 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1922
This is a controversy submitted on an agreed statement of facts. Mun. Ct. Code, § 124. The question presented is whether defendant is liable for the loss of a lady’s coat that was intrusted to a messenger boy for delivery.
From the agreed statement of facts it appears that the defendant is a New York corporation authorized under its charter to construct, maintain and operate telegraph lines and transmit intelligence over them; that the defendant maintains a messenger service in the city of New York and employs boys in connection therewith who are furnished to the general public on request for rendering such services as the public directs. It was further stipulated that on November 9, 1920, for a consideration paid to it the defendant furnished one of its messenger boys to the plaintiff; that this boy received from the plaintiff the coat in question to be delivered to Miss Morris at 602 West One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street, and that instead of making delivery of the coat to her, or returning the coat to the plaintiff, or making delivery to some one authorized by the plaintiff to receive it, the messenger boy delivered the coat
The plaintiff claims that this is an action in negligence and that the rule of respondeat superior applies. It is contended that the defendant is hable for the amount of damage sustained by plaintiff through the negligence and carelessness of defendant’s agent and employee who, while acting within the scope of his employment, negligently and carelessly gave away property which the plaintiff had intrusted to him for delivery to the person to whom it was addressed. The cases cited (Sanford v. American Dist. Tel. Co., 13 Misc. Rep. 88; Feiber v. Manhattan Dist. Tel. Co., 15 Daly, 62; Nowack v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 166 N. Y. 433; Fifth Ave. Bank v. Forty-second St. & G. St. F. R. R. Co., 137 id. 231) are authority for the proposition that the principal is to be held liable to third persons in a civil suit for the frauds, deceits, misrepresentations, torts, negligence and other malfeasances or misfeasances and omissions of duty of his agent in the course of his employment, although the principal did not authorize, or justify or participate in, or indeed know of such misconduct, or even if he forbade the acts or disapproved of them. In the case of Wilmerding v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 118 App. Div. 685; affd., 192 N. Y. 580, the defendant was held hable to a customer for the malfeasance of the defendant’s messenger boy in presenting false bills.
The defendant contends that in no event was it legally hable for what happened to the coat after the plaintiff handed it to the messenger boy with specific instructions to take it to Miss Morris at the address stated. The plaintiff asked for a messenger. He was furnished a messenger and gave the coat to the messenger and he directed the messenger as to where it should be dehvered. By that direction the messenger boy became the agent of the plaintiff for the delivery of the coat. The defendant was not and never has been engaged in the transportation of merchandise. There is nothing in the stipulated facts to show that it was so engaged. There is nothing to show any authority of the defendant to transport merchandise. There was no special contract with the defendant. The cases cited (Hirsch v. American District Telegraph Co., 112 App. Div. 265; Haskell v. Boston District Messenger Co., 190 Mass. 189; Hamilton v. American District Telegraph Co., N. Y. L. J. March 30, 1918; Mercola v. Western Union Tel. Co., 221 Ill. App. 153) are authority for the proposition that there can be no recovery on the theory of a special contract in cases of this character. There is nothing in the stipulated facts to indicate any
The defendant, therefore, is entitled to judgment dismissing the complaint on the merits.
Judgment accordingly.