(After stating the foregoing facts.) “Broadly, there is a joint enterprise or adventure when two or more combine their property or labor, or both, in a joint undertaking for profit, with rights of mutual'control, provided the arrangement does not establish a partnership.”
Atlanta Metallic Casket Co.
v.
Southeastern Wholesale Furniture Co.,
82
Ga. App.
353, 358 (
Under the evidence here, the court was authorized to find that the defendant had entered into a joint enterprise with Morris Trucking Company under an agreement to share leases and franchise rights and to pool profits, that the defendant resided in Alabama, but had turned over forms to Morris in Atlanta to be used by him in expediting Georgia shipments; that 49 similar leases made by Morris had been ratified by the defendant; that Morris or his employees regularly signed the name “R. L. Moore” to these leases and the defendant regularly received copies thereof and never protested, and that the defendant’s agent Hefner admitted Morris had had authority to sign his leases until a date subsequent to that of the accident in question. The court was fully authorized to find that the agent of S. J. Morris Company, in arranging with the plaintiff ,to lease his truck to Bowman Transportation Company, was acting in pursuance of and within the scope of the joint enterprise agreemént, and that the profits expected from the lease, which was for the purpose of transporting government goods *427 consigned to Bowman Transportation Company and S. J. Morris Motor Express Inc. jointly for delivery were to have been divided between these parties. This being so, the court was authorized to find that the defendant was bound by the act of his co-adventurer in placing his signature, by that of his Rome agent, on the lease contract.
It is strongly urged by the defendant in the special ground of the amended motion for a new trial that even if the question of agency should be determined adversely to him the contract itself is void and unenforceable, for the reason that the lease agreement as actually intended to be enforced represents an attempt on the part of the plaintiff to engage as a common carrier in interstate commerce without having first obtained a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission (49 USCA § 306 (a)); that it is therefore a mere subterfuge which “directly tends in a marked degree to bring about results that the law seeks to prevent [and] cannot be made the ground of a successful suit”
(Orkin Exterminating Co. of South Ga.
v. Dewberry, 204
Ga.
794 (
Since the defendant is bound by the contract, he is bound by the provision thereof, to. the effect that the driver is to be. deemed to be in his employ for the duration of the lease. Whether or not the defendant ever assumed any control or supervision of the driver of the vehicle on the trip south, he acquired the right to do so and accepted the status of an employer. Because of this, any negligence of the driver in allowing the vehicle to burn would not change the situation, as such negligence under the circumstances would be chargeable to the defendant rather than to the plaintiff. The provisions of Code § 12-203 to the effect that if the bailor sends his own agent with the thing bailed, then the hirer shall be responsible only for the consequences of his own directions, do not apply in a situation where the hirer expressly accepts the employee of the owner as his own employee for the duration of the bailment.
The trial court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial as amended.
Judgment affirmed.
