259 N.W. 120 | Mich. | 1935
Plaintiffs in the two cases are husband and wife. Counsel agreed to consolidate and try both cases without a jury. Separate judgments were entered; for Theresa Horvath in the sum of $1,500, and for John Horvath in the sum of $708.25.
Defendant company is the owner of a three-ton delivery truck used for hauling and delivering beer. Upon his return from Saginaw one afternoon defendant's driver, McGee, who was not served with process, was directed to deliver a half barrel of beer to a customer of the company, located about seven miles southwest of the city of Flint, and upon completion of this duty, he was directed to take the truck to his home and park it there for the night. Disregarding his employer's instructions, McGee left the warehouse, went to his home, which is located south thereof in the city, picked up a relative and made the delivery. Instead of returning directly to his home, he and his companion had some *354 sandwiches and beer, and then proceeded to visit other drinking places. They returned to the city by another route, and after passing the place where the truck should have been parked, and the neighborhood of the employer's warehouse, the pair reached the northerly part of the city of Flint some time after 9 o'clock in the evening. About two miles north of his home, McGee lost control of the truck, ran up on the curb, damaged property in general and struck plaintiff Theresa Horvath as she was leaving the front porch of a house in which she had been visiting.
The trial court's attention was directed to the applicable law as stated in Drobnicki v. Packard Motor Car Co.,
POTTER, C.J., and NELSON SHARPE, NORTH, FEAD, WIEST, BUTZEL, and EDWARD M. SHARPE, JJ., concurred. *355