This is аn appeal by the plaintiff from that.portion of the judgment, entered by the court in the ■above case, giving defendant Pacific Acreage Company, a corporation, judgment on motion for nonsuit.
Plaintiff was injured, during the business hours of the day, by an аutomobile driven by the defendant Ordway, and admittedly owned by the defendant Pacific Acreage Company, as to which defendant the nonsuit was granted. It was likewise admitted that at the time of the accident Ordway was in the employ of the Pacific Aсreage Company, the disclaimer of liability 'by that defendant resting upon the denial that at that time Ordway was the agent of the company, or acting within the scope of Ms employment.
In addition to these admissions, it was shown that Ordway was the son of thе president of the Pacific Acreage Company and was the general manager of the company’s ranch, located near Fresno. His work was mainly in m-anaging operations on the ranch, he purchasing.supplies and having men working *760 undеr him. He testified that he “came and'went as he chose, so long as he kept the business of the Pacific Acreage Company moving and attended to. He went to town and various other places, as he saw fit. Nobody dictated to him when he should go and when he should come back.” He used the automobile of the company, apparently, as he pleased, and in going about for the purpose of purchasing the necessary supplies for the ranch and attending to its business.
Plaintiff introduced the deposition of the defendant Ordway, at part of his case, in which Ordway testified that on the morning of the accident he had driven from the Pacific Acreage Company’s ranch in the automobile to Fresno, for the sole purpose of purchasing a banjo, which he had previously ordered; that, the purchase concluded, he did not remember having stopped at any other place in town; that the purchase of the banjo was his main object, and, that accomplished, that was all he was thinking of; that he made no purchases1 for the Pacific Acreage Company and did nothing whatsoever for the company.
In support of his claim that the court erred in granting the motion for nonsuit on the foregoing testimony, the appellant relies upon the manifest conflict, arising in the case from the weight which must be given certain presumptions, as to the liability of the defendant Pacific Acreage Company resulting from the admitted facts in the casе, as against the testimony of defendant Ordway tending to completely overthrow such presumptions.
Section 1963 of the Code of Civil Procedure is as follows:
“All other presumptions are satisfactory, if uncontradicted. They are denominated disputable presumptions, and may be controverted by other evidence. The following are of that kind: . . .
“20. Thаt the ordinary course of business has been followed.”
The case of
Jessen
v.
Peterson, Nelson Co.,
“It was an admitted fact in the. ease that the horse and buggy belonged to the corporation defendant, and that the driver, Charles Nilson, ‘was an officer of the defendant who had the right to operate the buggy.’ Nilson wаs the vice-president of the defendant, and testified as a witness in its behalf. Upon his cross-examination it developed that in the performance of his duties as vice-president he ‘had no regular hours whatsoever; that he had to go around all over the city sometimes; had to go out to the park and Richmond, where the corporation was working at the time; had to go everywhere and see that the work was all right.’
“From this it would appear that in addition to being vice-president of thе defendant, Nilson was also the general superintendent of its work, and that in the performance of his duties he was granted a roving commission which permitted *763 Mm to look after the business of the defendant at the times and in the manner which best suited his own convenience. It is the accepted rule in this and other jurisdictions that where an employee is intrusted with the possession and operation of a vehicle, with permission to use it at Ms discretion in the business of the employer, the latter will be held responsible in damages for injuries inflicted upon the person of another resulting from the negligence of the employee in the use and operation of the veMcle; and in such a case it is not necessary for the person seeking damages to prove that at the time of the injuries the employee was engaged in executing any particular business or specific command of his principal. That the employee, at the time of the commission of the tort, was acting within the general scope of his employment, and that the injury occurred as the result of his negligence, is all that need 'be shown in order to charge his employer with liability for such injury. (Mulvehill v. Bates,31 Minn. 364 , [47 Am. Rep. 796 ,17 N. W. 959 ] ; Rahn v. Singer Mfg. Co.,26 Fed. 912 ; Riordan v. Gas Consumers’ Assn.,4 Cal. App. 639 , [88 Pac. 809 ].) ”
The court held “that the testimony of Nilson, coupled with the admitted fact that the defendant was the owner of the horse and buggy, and had conferred upon Nilson the right of using the same in its business, sufficiently supports the trial court’s finding that the horse and buggy were owned by the defendant, and ‘wholly in the possession and under the control of the defendant’ at the time of the accident.”
In the case of Riordan v. Gas Consumers’ Assn., supra, the court with approval quoted from the ease of Mulve-Tvill v. Bates, supra, where, in speaking of the liability of a defendant for the negligence of a driver, wMle engaged in carrying a load of poles for himself, the court said: “But here the wagon was intrusted, generally, to the drivеr, to be used entirely at his discretion.” In Rahn v. Singer Mfg. Co., supra, the court said: “In order to fix responsibility of the defendant, it is not necessary for the plaintiff to prove that the servant, for whose tort he seeks damages, was at the time of the commission of the tort Engaged in executing specific commands of the defendant. It is enough for Mm to prove that the servant was acting within the general scope of his employment, but this much is necessary. If the usage of the parties, under the servant’s con *764 tract of hiring, was of such a character that it allowed the servant to attend to his duties on such terms as suited his convenience, and at the time of the commission of the tort he was engaged in his own private 'business, but at the same time was pursuing the defendant’s business in the service for which he was employed, the defendant would still be liable.”
Under the admitted circumstances of Ordway’s employment, we are not willing to hold that his testimony as to the manner in which he performed his duties connected therewith and his rather uncertain testimony as to his movements following the consummation of the personal business, which he claims brought him from his employer’s ranch some distance into the city of Fresno, on the day of thе accident, is so convincing, or free from justifiable doubt, as to amount to an admission by plaintiff, or to eliminate the presumption that Ordway at the time of the collision was engaged upon the business of his employer. (Ferris v. Sterling, supra.)
Furthermore, plaintiff is not bound by Ordway’s testimony. “A party to the record of any civil action . . . may be examined by the adverse party as if under cross-examination, subject to the rules applicable to the examination of other witnesses. The party calling such adverse witness *765 shall not he bound by Ms testimony, and the testimony given by such witness may be rebutted by the party calling him for such examination by other evidence.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 2055.)
The judgment in favor of the defendant Pacific Acreage Company is reversed.
Richards, J., and Nourse, J., pro tem., 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 June 21, 1919.
