53 Md. 245 | Md. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The only substantial question in this case is, whether the defendant, the present appellee, is liable for the wrongful act of his servant in killing the plaintiff’s cow, while driving her out of the defendant’s corn-field.
The Court below, at the instance of the defendant, instructed the jury that there was no evidence in the cause legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover. To this ruling, and the rejection of the prayers offered by the plaintiff, the latter excepted.
There is no question as to whether the relation of master and servant existed between the' defendant and the party doing the wrongful act complained of; that is conceded. But the question is, whether the act of driving the cow out of the corn-field was within the scope of the servant’s employment, under the circumstances of the case.
If that act was, either expressly or by fair implication, embraced within the employment to do general farm work on the defendant’s farm, then, it is clear, the latter is liable for any wrong or negligence committed by the
Was, then, the servant acting in the course of his employment ? What is embraced, as commonly understood, in general farm work? In the very nature of the employment there must he some implied authority and duties belonging to it; and this as well for the protection of the master as third parties. If, for instance, a servant thus employed should see a gate open or-a panel of fence down, through which a herd of cattle might or would likely enter and destroy his master’s grain, we suppose all would say, that it would he the positive duty of the servant to
It follows that we cannot concur with the Court below in the instruction given to the jury; and, for the reasons already stated, we think the first and second prayers offered by the plaintiff should have been granted. The plaintiff’s third prayer seems to have been intended, not so much as an instruction upon the law of the case, as an instruction as to the conclusion of fact at which the jury were at liberty to arrive upon finding certain other facts. This form of prayer is not free from objection, and there was no error in rejecting it.
Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.