141 Conn. 539 | Conn. | 1954
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff is an insurance company. It issued a policy of automobile liability insurance to Sam Silverherz covering a motor truck. The truck was leased by him to the defendant corporation, hereinafter called the company, and was in use in connection with tobacco farming. An employee of the company, Dorothy Lee, was injured while riding on the truck. She brought a suit against Silverherz, which the plaintiff defended, and recovered judgment. The present action is against the company to recover the amount paid by the plaintiff,
Upon the foregoing facts the trial court concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from the company, and rendered judgment accordingly. It is from this judgment that the defendant has appealed. The assignments of error concern the above conclusion.
While it is not specifically stated in the stipulated facts incorporated in the finding that it was an employee of the company who was operating the truck at the time the injury to Dorothy Lee occurred, this fact may be taken for granted. It is specifically found that Dorothy Lee’s injuries were sustained as a result of the negligent operation of the truck by the company. The company is a corporation and therefore could act only by its agent. Furthermore, the Superior Court file in the action by Dorothy Lee against Silverherz, referred to in the stipulation, shows that at the time of the accident the truck was being operated by the servant and agent of the com
In this action the plaintiff stands in Silverherz’ shoes as Silverherz’ subrogee. Silverherz’ liability to Dorothy Lee arose by operation of the statute. General Statutes § 2479. That statute reads as follows: “Any person renting or leasing to another any motor vehicle owned by him shall be liable for any damage to any person or property caused by the operation of such motor vehicle while so rented or leased, to the same extent as the operator would have been liable if he had also been the owner.” In short, the statute imposes the same liability upon Silverherz as the law imposes upon the operator of the truck.
Section 2479 is contained in chapter 110 of the General Statutes, which defines “operator” as meaning “any person who operates a motor vehicle or who steers or directs the course of a motor vehicle which is being towed.” General Statutes § 2350 (28). In the light of this definition, the company could not be the operator. An operator must be an individual. As originally enacted, the statute on the liability of an owner for damage caused by a leased vehicle ended with the word “leased.” Public Acts
Dorothy Lee could have looked to the company under the Workmen’s Compensation Act or sued the driver in tort. She chose instead to sue Silverherz under the statute. Since Silverherz’ liability under the statute is predicated upon the liability of the operator of the truck, the Workmen’s Compensation Act is not involved. Silverherz could not have set it up as a defense in the action brought by Dorothy Lee against him because neither he nor the operator of the truck was her employer. General Statutes § 7419. Nor could he have required that the company be cited in as a party defendant in the action against him, because the statute under which the action was brought created a liability in Silverherz separate and distinct from the liability of the company.
Having noted the theory of the liability of Silverherz under the statute, we next consider whether the company owed him any duty by virtue of its legal relationship to him. As previously stated, Silverherz leased the truck to the company. It entrusted it to its driver. The negligence of that driver by virtue of the statute imposed liability upon Silverherz. The driver was the agent of the company and engaged upon its business, and so the company
There is no error.
In this opinion Ingles, C. J., Baldwin and O’Sullivan, Js., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The majority base their reasoning and decision upon the theory that the truck was being operated by the servant and agent of the defendant. This has been gleaned, not from the finding of the trial court in this case, but by taking judicial notice of the contents of the file of the case in which Dorothy Lee was the plaintiff and Silverherz, the plaintiff’s assured, was the defendant.
The trial court did not find that a person who was the agent and servant of the defendant was operating the truck and that his negligent operation of it caused the injuries to Dorothy Lee. It found that the defendant “was operating” it “and did so negligently operate it as to cause injury to one Dorothy M. Lee.” The court did not conclude that the liability of the plaintiff’s assured to Dorothy Lee resulted from the
As the trial court did not find that the operator of the truck was the agent and servant of the defendant and that his negligent operation of it caused the injuries, I cannot and do not agree that the defendant is liable.