37 A.2d 596 | Pa. | 1944
This case involves the oft-recurring but legally troublesome subject of the agency of a borrowed employe.
Defendant, who conducts a garage and automobile business, was the owner of an automobile hearse which he leased from time to time to undertakers. Plaintiff, who is in the undertaking business, hired it for the purpose of conducting a funeral. Defendant supplied the gas, the oil, and a driver named Kiehl. The funeral procession was to travel a distance of 40 miles. Plaintiff led in his own car accompanied by an employe named Stitt; following him came an automobile containing the pallbearers, then the hearse, and then the cars of the mourners. After proceeding about ten miles he noticed that the procession behind him had disappeared; he went *513 back some distance and discovered that the hearse had stalled. After getting the other cars off the highway so that they would not impede traffic he returned to the hearse where he found Kiehl and Stitt beside it. He walked forward for a distance of some six or eight feet and, while standing there, an explosion occurred which set his clothes afire and burned him badly. He brought the present suit for damages, alleging both a breach of a warranty that the hearse was in proper condition and negligence on the part of Kiehl in the manner in which he attempted to start the hearse. He recovered a verdict of $22,500. Defendant appeals.
The real basis for plaintiff's action is the charge of negligence and not the breach of warranty. Whether such a warranty existed and, if so, whether it was breached, are of no importance from a legal standpoint because the stalling of the hearse had no causal relationship to the accident but merely furnished the condition or gave rise to the occasion by which it was made possible: See Bruggeman v. City of York,
This brings us to the principal problem involved — one in regard to which error was committed that makes a retrial necessary. The learned trial judge gave the jury *515
what were practically binding instructions to the effect that Kiehl was the servant and agent of defendant at the time of the happening of the accident, although there was evidence from which the jury, had the question been freely submitted to them, might have found that for the duration and purposes of the funeral Kiehl was the servant of plaintiff, notwithstanding his general employment and the payment of his wages by defendant.2 While plaintiff testified that he had no authority whatever over the driver of the hearse, he admitted that he was in entire charge of the funeral procession. The case is not one in which a vehicle and its operator are hired merely to transport a person or property from one place to another and the lessee is wholly unconcerned with the details of the transportation. Here plaintiff not only prescribed the route taken by the procession and fixed the speed at which the cars traveled but, as the undertaker, he was largely concerned with the orderly management of the funeral cortège. When the hearse stalled the procession was unpleasantly disrupted, and, while he may have had no right to direct Kiehl in regard to making extended mechanical repairs on the hearse had any such repairs been required, a jury might reasonably infer from the evidence that, as it was his business to see that the funeral procession promptly resumed its course, he had the power and authority to instruct Kiehl to get the hearse moving and, for that purpose, to prime the carburetor, start the motor, or take such other operative action as might be found necessary or desirable. Defendant testified that the drivers, including Kiehl, "had standing orders that the undertaker was the man in charge and the driver was to do as he says at all times," and in this he was corroborated by Kiehl himself. The situation, therefore, was not like those in which the facts *516
are all undisputed and the inferences plain — as in Lang v.Hanlon,
The question whether, under all the facts and circumstances established by the evidence, Kiehl was, at the time of the happening of the accident, the servant of plaintiff or of defendant, should have been left to the jury, together, of course, with the question whether he was negligent and thereby caused the explosion.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted.