156 N.E. 650 | NY | 1927
Defendant sent out his motor truck with a driver and a salesman to deliver merchandise. On the way back the salesman asked to be allowed to run the car, though he was without an operator's license. Permission being granted, he slipped into the seat behind the wheel while the driver stood upon the running board beside. After going about a mile and a half, the salesman ran the truck into a car which had been parked along the roadway. The truck, after striking and damaging the car, went on about forty feet till it collided with a telephone pole, which it threw to the ground. The owner of the car sues the owner of the truck.
(1) We think a case was made for submission to the jury, though liability were to be tested by the rule at common law. The driver was negligent, or so the triers of the facts might find, when he placed at the wheel a substitute without skill or experience in the management of cars. The substitute did not even have such presumptive evidence of competence as may be supplied by an operator's license (Pigeon v. Mass. N.E. Ry. Co.,
Two cases in the English Court of Appeal state the applicable principle with clearness and precision. In one (Engelhart v.Farrant Co, 1897, 1 Q.B. 240), a delivery wagon was sent out with a man and a boy. The man's duty was to drive; the boy's duty was to deliver parcels. The boy had nothing to do with the horses. The man's instructions were not to leave the cart. The driver did in fact leave the cart, and while he was absent the lad drove on and came into collision with the plaintiff's carriage and injured it. The court held that the negligence of the driver in leaving the cart in the custody of the boy might be found to be the effective cause of the collision and the damage. "If a stranger interferes," said Lord ESHER, M.R., "it does not follow that the defendant is liable; but equally it does not follow that *162 because a stranger interferes the defendant is not liable if the negligence of a servant of his is an effective cause of the accident." In the other and later case, this ruling was approved and followed (Ricketts v. Tilling, 1915, 1 K.B. 644). The driver of a motor omnibus, sitting on the box, gave the wheel to the conductor who was not authorized to drive. The conductor being inexperienced and incompetent, the omnibus mounted the pavement and injured passers-by. The court held that "there was a question of fact whether the effective cause of the accident was that the driver committed a breach of his duty (which was either to prevent another person from driving, or, if he allowed him to drive, to see that he drove properly), or whether the driver had discharged that duty" (cf. Pollock on Torts, pp. 46, 93, 492). In brief, the basis of liability is always the negligence of the servant. If such negligence exists, and is found to be an effective cause, it does not lose its significance as a basis of liability because it may be found to have combined with the negligence of the substitute.
Cases may indeed be found where the master has been subjected to a liability even broader (Geiss v. Taxicab Co.,
(2) Passing from common law to statute, we find the owner's liability not merely continued, but extended. By Highway Law (§ 282-e) "every owner of a motor vehicle operated upon a public highway shall be liable and responsible for death or injuries to person or property resulting from negligence in the operation of such motor vehicle, in the business of such owner or otherwise, by any person legally using or operating the same with the permission, express or implied, of such owner." "Use" as well as "operation" may thus fasten liability upon the owner under the provisions of the statute (Fluegel v. Coudert,
(3) Errors were committed in disposing of some of the requests to charge. In a closer case they would be important. Upon the record before us, they did not determine the result.
The judgment should be affirmed with costs.
POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, etc. *166