defendant appeals from a judgment for $1,250 damages for injuries to the plaintiff, found by a-jury to have been caused by the negligent operation of an automobile, owned by the defendant and driven by his chauffeur.
The appellant argues that the physical facts are such as to demonstrate the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, but as there is evidence to the contrary, the finding of the jury is "conclusive. Error is claimed in rulings of the court concerning certain questions asked of jurors and of the plaintiff, the purpose of which, it is argued, was to suggest that the suit was being defended by an insurance carrier of the defendant. The particular questions do not appear to have been objectionable. The jury was instructed to disregard the answers, and if error were committed it was of such a character as not to warrant the reversal of the judgment.
Objection is made to the giving and refusal to give certain instructions upon the rule of
respondeat superior.
The attack upon them is the same as that upon the ruling of the court in denying nonsuit and in refusing to instruct the jury to find for the defendant. The judgment must be reversed, because under the admitted facts the case is within
*717
the rule announced by Chief Justice Holt: “No master is chargeable with the acts of his servant, but when he acts in execution of the authority given by his master.”
(Middleton
v.
Fowler,
1 Salk. 282;
Baker
v.
Kinsey,
Stated most strongly for the plaintiff and respondent, the facts in regard to agency are as follows: When the chauffeur was employed he was instructed never to use the ear for any purpose of his own. The car was kept at his employer’s residence, on Washington Street, in San Francisco, four or five blocks westerly from a public garage, near Presidio Avenue and Sacramento Street, where the defendant’s gasoline and supplies were ordinarily purchased. The chauffeur did not board at the employer’s house, and got luncheon near the public garage. Ordinarily when supplies were needed he asked his employer’s wife for permission to take the car to the public garage for the supplies when he went to his luncheon. He was under general instructions to report at the house after luncheon at 2 o’clock. .On the day of the accident the chauffeur did not ask permission to take the car to the public garage, but, needing gasoline, he took it there at the noon hour. He left the car at the public garage while he took his midday meal and on his return purchased gasoline and filled the tires with air. Under his general instructions it was then his duty to drive the car four or five blocks westwardly to his employer’s house to report there for duty at 2 o’clock. This duty he did not perform.
The chauffeur was having an overcoat altered at a^tailor-shop at Sutter and Montgomery Streets, some two .and a half miles east of the garage. Wholly for his own purposes he desired to go to the tailor’s. He looked at his watch and concluded that if he went down town on the street-car he could not get back to the garage in time to take the motor car to his master’s house by 2 o’clock. In disobedience of his instruction never to use the car for his own purposes he abandoned his duty to drive the car west four blocks and drove it easterly about two and a half miles. At the tailor-shop he attended to his business and started westerly. He picked up a friend, intending to leave him near the public garage, and on the way out, while still more than a mile east of the garage, at Bush and Taylor Streets, the ear he was driving collided with the plaintiff’s machine *718 under circumstances which the jury found were caused by the chauffeur’s negligence. Upon these facts it is contended on behalf of the respondent that there was a mere temporary deviation from the line of the servant’s employment, that - after his visit to the tailor-shop it was his duty to take the car to his master’s house by 2 o’clock, that he was performing that duty, and, in either case, that the question of whether or not he was acting within the scope of his agency at the moment of the accident was one of fact to be determined by the jury.
In the opinion in a case which, in the respondent’s brief, is not sought to be differentiated in principle from this, the court quoted at length from a note in
In a very few cases in other states when the tort occurred on the homeward journey of the disobedient servant the master has been held liable, but the great current of authority, in this country and in England, is against those isolated cases.
(Danforth
v.
Fisher,
75 N. H. 111, [
Judgment is reversed.
Langdon, P. J., and Haven, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on August 21, 1919.
All the Justices concurred.
