150 A. 107 | Conn. | 1930
The complaint alleged these facts: The plaintiff, a child of eight, lived in the house in the front of the yard occupied by the defendant in transacting its business and was in the habit of playing daily with other children in this yard. While so playing he was knocked down and severely and permanently injured by a truck of defendant while being driven by its manager and agent, the father of the plaintiff, and backed into the yard in the regular course of his employment. The accident was due to the negligence of the driver in operating the truck without having it properly under control and without keeping a proper look-out for children playing in the yard, although he saw and knew they were so playing.
The defendant demurred to the complaint because (1) the action was founded on the negligent acts of the driver of the truck, the father of the plaintiff-minor and cannot be maintained by him for his parent's tortious acts, (2) it does not appear from the complaint that the minor either at the time he suffered his injuries *379 or at the time this action was started was emancipated from his parent. The court ruled that as an unemancipated child cannot recover from his father for negligence and the defendant corporation must act through agents its liability for their acts is purely derivative, and based on the liability of the servant who committed the act, and if it has to pay for its servant's negligence it can recover over from him.
The first question raised by the demurrer is that the action will not lie because founded upon the father's tortious acts. The rule of respondeat superior makes one responsible for the act of his servant when the servant's act was a wrong to the other and was done by him when he was engaged in doing something in the line of his service or incidental to it. Dean Smith writes in his article, Frolic and Detour, 23 Columbia Law Review, 452, that "no legal doctrine has been so generally criticised and yet so generally adhered to by courts as the doctrine of respondeat superior." The limitation of the master's responsibility to wrongful acts of the servant while doing his master's business is at the base of our characterization of the doctrine ofrespondeat superior as one of universal justice. Differing reasons have been given for this doctrine; we are not in doubt, we hold that the doctrine is bottomed upon a rule of public policy and social justice. "On the whole," we say, "substantial justice is best served by making a master responsible for the injuries caused by his servant acting in his service, when set to work by him to prosecute his private ends, with the expectation of deriving from that work private benefit. This has at times proved a hard rule, but it rests upon a public policy too firmly settled to be questioned." Hearns v.Waterbury Hospital,
Two reasons have been assigned in cases which hold that this rule is not applicable where the action could not be maintained by the injured person against the servant who has through his wrongful act of trespass or negligence caused the injury. The master's liability is said to be derivative, that is based upon the servant's liability. Maine v. Maine Sons Co.,
In Nebraska, Washington, and Michigan, in Emerson
v. Western Seed Irrigation Co.,
There is error, the judgment is reversed and the case