202 Wis. 209 | Wis. | 1930
The following opinion was filed June 11, 1930:
The defendant Leo Burg is the proprietor of a garage located about one mile from the village of Slinger.
Under ordinary circumstances Rottenbach was, at the time, in - the prosecution of his own business. Where an employee works for another at a given place of employment, and lives at home or boards himself, it is the business of the employee to present himself at the place of employment, and the relation of master and servant does not exist while he is going between his home and his place of employment. (See cases cited in the dissenting opinion of Taylor, J., in Ewald v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. 70 Wis. 420, 437, 36 N. W. 12, 591.) It has accordingly been held by this court that where an employer permitted an employee the use of a car in going to his meals, the employee was not facilitating the master’s business, and the master was not responsible for damages resulting from his negligence while on such trips. Steffen v. McNaughton, 142 Wis. 49, 124 N. W. 1016; Gewanski v. Ellsworth, 166 Wis. 250, 164 N. W. 996; Bloom v. Krueger, 182 Wis. 29, 195 N. W. 851. However, where by the contract of employment it is made the duty of the master to transport the servant from his home, or other designated place, to the place of his work, the relation of .master and servant exists during the course of such transportation. Ewald v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co.,
From this we see that, under ordinary circumstances, it is the business of the' employee to present himself at the place of employment, and while going thereto he is in the prosecution of his own business. Where, however, by the contract of employment the master undertakes to transport the employee to the place of his work, the trip is made in the prosecution of the master’s business.
By the contract of employment here under consideration Burg did not undertake to transport Rottenbach from his home to the garage. By the terms of that contract, however, Burg did agree to permit Rottenbach to use one of his cars in going back and forth. The question is whether during these trips the car was being driven to facilitate the business of Rottenbach or Burg.
The car was not being driven in the prosecution of Burg’s business unless it was Burg’s business to transport Rotten-bach from his home to the garage. This cannot be said to have been Burg’s business unless he assumed it by virtue of the contract of employment. While by that contract it was agreed that Rottenbach might use one of his cars, that fell far short of imposing upon Burg the duty of transporting Rottenbach back and forth. Such trips were still made in the prosecution of Rottenbach’s and not Burg’s business. By the contract of employment Burg simply agreed to extend to Rottenbach the use of the automobile to
However, reliance is placed upon other circumstances, which will now be considered, to establish the fact that the automobile at the time of the accident was being driven in the prosecution of Burg’s business. In the evening Rotten-bach customarily drove the car to his home and kept it there during the night so that he might use it upon his return to
By the Court. — The judgment against the defendant Leo Burg is reversed, and cause remanded with instructions to dismiss the action as to him.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on October 14, 1930.