131 A. 592 | Pa. | 1925
This appeal is from the refusal of the court below to remove a nonsuit.
On Saturday, November 24, 1923, the minor plaintiff, over 14 years of age, was at his father's place of business, when an automobile truck of the defendants called for a load of material. The driver, not knowing the route to his next stopping place, asked the boy to guide him. There being no room on the seat, the lad took a position on the running board and the truck proceeded on its way. The driver made a sharp turn to avoid a collision with another automobile, and in so doing the boy was thrown to the street and injured.
Entirely aside from the question of the plaintiff's contributory negligence in riding on the running board of a moving motor car, we agree with the court below that an "employer is liable only for the acts of his servant done in the scope of his employment, and the employment in this case did not include taking the minor plaintiff for a ride" either as "a passenger," which the statement of claim alleges he was, or as an assistant *74
(Byrne v. Pittsburgh B. Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.