179 P. 697 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
Appeal from judgment of nonsuit rendered in an action for damages for personal injuries tried before a jury. The injuries are alleged to have been suffered by reason of the negligent driving by one West of an automobile owned by the defendant and respondent, Chevrolet Motor Company of California, a corporation. West, the driver of the car, was named as a defendant in the complaint, but no service of summons was made upon him, and the case proceeded to trial against the Motor Company as the sole defendant, whose motion for nonsuit was granted at the close of the plaintiff's case.
Appellant urges two grounds for reversal of the judgment. (1) In order to prove the agency of the driver of the automobile for the defendant company, and the consequent liability of that company, plaintiff called as a witness its president and general manager, and proved by him that the automobile which caused the injuries complained of was then being used by West under the permission of said manager, and that it then bore the license number issued to the defendant company under a manufacturers or dealers' license. The defendant's ownership of the automobile at the time of the accident was admitted by the witness on cross-examination.
During the direct examination of this witness, in response to questions propounded by the court, and upon cross-examination by defendant's counsel, further facts were elicited as to the relations between West and the Motor Company and the nature of the permission under which the automobile was being used at the time of the accident. It then appeared that Mr. West was employed by the defendant company as a *740 traveling salesman to visit prospective dealers in that part of the state of California north of Sacramento and in southern Oregon; that he had no duties in connection with the defendant company in the vicinity of San Francisco; that, on the Saturday afternoon preceding the day of the accident, he asked the general manager of the company for permission to have a car on Sunday to take his family and mother out for a ride, which permission was granted to him. The manager testified that no other conversation took place between himself and Mr. West as to the use of the car. The accident occurred in San Mateo County while the car was being used on this Sunday pleasure excursion.
Under the recent case of McWhirter v. Fuller,
In a somewhat similar case the court of appeals of New York has recently said: "The presumption growing out of a primafacie case, however, remains only so long as there is no substantial evidence to the contrary. When that is offered the presumption disappears, and, unless met by further proof, there is nothing to justify a finding based solely upon it. (Carroll
v. Knickerbocker Ice Co.,
Evidence elicited on cross-examination is regarded as testimony on the part of the party calling the witness, and not as evidence of the party cross-examining. Upon the determination of a motion for a nonsuit, all of the evidence produced on behalf of the plaintiff, both on direct and cross examination, must be considered. Taking all this evidence into consideration, it appeared, without conflict, that, at the time of the accident, the automobile was being used by West solely in a pleasure excursion, for which purpose it had been borrowed by him from the defendant company. The fact that he was an employee of the defendant company, performing duties in another part of the state, did not alter his relations as a borrower of the machine. Appellant's brief contains a statement that the plaintiff attempted to prove that West was engaged on business of the defendant company on the day of the accident. Our attention is not called, however, to any portion of the record sustaining this assertion, for which reason it cannot be considered.
The liability of an owner of an automobile for the negligence of its driver depends on the existence of the relation of principal and agent between the two. This relation does not result from the mere borrowing of such automobile. Hence it is uniformly held that the owner is not responsible for injuries resulting from the negligence of a driver whose only relation to the owner is that of borrower. (Berry on Automobiles, secs. 601, 684, 685; Hartley v. Miller,
(2) The second ground for reversal, urged by appellant, is that the respondent was estopped from denying that the automobile, which caused the injuries complained of, was then being used by said respondent in its business. This for the reason that the automobile was then operated under a manufacturers or dealers' license, obtained by the defendant company under section 9 of the Motor Vehicle Act (Stats. 1915, p. 397). The section referred to provides:
"Every manufacturer of, or dealer in, motor vehicles may make application to the department, by mail or otherwise, upon a blank provided by the department for a general distinguishing number or symbol, instead of registering each motor vehicle owned or controlled by him . . . And the said department shall grant the application if satisfied of the facts stated in the application, and shall issue to the applicant a certificate of registration containing the name and business address of the applicant and the general distinguishing number or symbol assigned to him . . .; and every motor vehicle owned or controlled by such manufacturer or dealer shall be regarded as registered under such general distinguishing number or symbol until sold or until let for hire or loaned for a period of more than ten successive days."
The application made by respondent to the motor vehicle department for a license under the provisions of the above section was introduced in evidence by the plaintiff, and contained the following agreement signed by the respondent:
"It is agreed by the applicant that in consideration of the issuance of this certificate of registration the number plates issued therewith shall be used only in connection with the business of the purchase and sale of motor vehicles and for no other purpose, and it is further specifically agreed that the said number plates shall not be used upon motor vehicles in the rental, taxicab, stage, trucking or transportation service, or in any commercial business other than that of manufacturer *743 or dealer in motor vehicles, and that the said number plates shall remain continuously in the possession of the applicant. It is still further specifically agreed that upon failure to observe any of the provisions of this agreement the certificate of registration issued to the applicant may be cancelled by the Motor Vehicle Department and that the number plates issued therewith shall be returned to, or may be taken possession of by, the Motor Vehicle Department."
Appellant argues that inasmuch as the manufacturers or dealers' license, obtained under the above application contained certain concessions to the licensee not made to the owner of a single automobile, the recipient of such a license is bound by the above agreement and is thereby estopped from claiming that an automobile, bearing such license number, was used otherwise than in the conduct of its business.
To sustain this contention reliance is placed upon the case of Cargill v. Duffy, 123 Fed. 721. In that case, the owner of a licensed cab let the same, together with the horse and harness, by the day, for a fixed price, to a driver, to be used by him for the purpose of carrying passengers for hire in the streets of New York. It further appeared that the owner of the cab had applied for and received from the city of New York a separate badge for each cab owned by him and that when he rented the cab he furnished the driver with such hackman's badge. The ordinances of the city of New York with regard to the operation of cabs and hacks are set forth at length in the opinion. Among other provisions, it is prescribed that "every licensed owner or driver of any hackney . . . shall wear conspicuously on the left breast of the outer coat a metal badge . . . having engraved thereon the words 'Licensed Hack' and the number of such licensed hackney cab, said badge to be issued to and belong to said owner, and to be issued by him to any driver representing him, and for whom he shall be responsible." Under these facts it was held that the owner of the cab made the cab-driver his representative, and so held him out to the world, and was estopped as to the plaintiff from asserting the contrary or setting up his contract with the driver. The liability of the owner was predicated on the fact that the cab was "managed by a driver upon whom he [the owner] had placed a badge of authority which said to such injured person: 'This driver represents *744 the owner of the cab and for the acts of the driver, such owner is responsible.' "
The issuance of this "hackman's badge," and its use under the provisions of the ordinance and the authority of the owner of the cab in the business of carrying passengers for hire, distinguish the above-cited case from the one now under consideration. The English cases discussed in the opinion are also distinguished by similar differences of facts and statutory provisions.
In Trombley v. Stevens-Duryea Co.,
Under a similar statute and somewhat similar facts, the supreme court of Rhode Island reached the same conclusion inColwell v. Aetna Bottle Stopper Co., 33 Rawle I. 531, 540, [
Upon careful examination of the provisions of the California Motor Vehicle Act, we are unable to find therein any provisions which made illegal the operation of the automobile by West under the circumstances of this case. The only penalty prescribed in the application blank, upon which appellant relies, is that, upon failure to observe the provisions thereof, the certificate of registration may be canceled by the motor vehicle department. The Motor Vehicle Act itself in section 32 thereof provides that "Any person violating any of its provisions shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor." The following sections provide for special penalties for the violation of several designated sections of the act. We do not find, however, any provision of the act which can be said to have been violated by the respondent company when it loaned its automobile to its employee West for the purpose of a pleasure excursion. Indeed, as pointed out by respondent, the provision of section 9 of the act that the registration there provided for shall be effective as to every motor vehicle so registered "until sold or until let for hire or loaned for a period of more than ten successive days," seems to imply a statutory permission for the loaning of such vehicle under the license for any period less than ten days. Nor *746 does the California act contain any provision, similar to that of the New York ordinance, making the driver of a licensed automobile the representative of the owner thereof. In the absence of any such statutory provision, either creating a liability against the owner for use of a registered vehicle by a borrower thereof or prohibiting such use, we are unable to perceive how it can successfully be contended that the respondent company represented West to be its agent in the operation of the automobile upon the day of the accident, in such a manner as to constitute the basis of an estoppel against such respondent.
Judgment affirmed.
Langdon, P. J., and Brittain, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on April 10, 1919.
All the Justices concurred, except Olney, J., who was absent.