11 N.E.2d 113 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1937
Lead Opinion
This is on appeal on questions of law from the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton county.
The appellant, Frank O. Hudson, instituted an action against The Ohio Bus Line Company and Parkway Cabs, Inc., appellees, alleging that by reason of a collision occurring between a bus and a taxicab he, as a passenger in the bus, was injured.
There are no allegations of fact showing that the injuries of appellant were due to the joint negligence of the bus company and the taxicab company. The facts justify only the conclusion that such negligence, if it existed, was merely concurrent. The bus and the taxicab were being driven in opposite directions upon a street in the city of Cincinnati. They collided. The appellant was injured. This does not constitute joint negligence. We agree with the reasons and conclusions in Davies v. Seasley, 18 Ohio Law Abs., 607; The Stark County Agricultural Society v. Brenner,an Infant,
We are not unmindful of the case of Dash v. Fairbanks, Morse Co.,
The answer of the bus company denied negligence and charged the collision to the sole negligence of the taxicab company. This latter allegation was surplusage, for its defense was satisfied if the appellant failed to show negligence on the part of the bus company.
In like manner, the cab company denied negligence, and charged that appellant's injuries were due to the *485 sole negligence of the bus company. Here again, the pleader exceeded the requirements of a defense.
No affirmative relief being asked by the bus company against the cab company or vice versa the allegations of negligence were surplusage and should have been stricken out of the pleading. However, no request was made by either defendant for an election, and the answers waived this right.
A motion was, however, made by the cab company for dismissal at the close of the evidence of appellant, and this motion the court granted. This is assigned as error.
The case proceeded against the bus company resulting in a verdict in favor of appellant, which, it is claimed, is inadequate. The refusal of the court to grant a new trial because of such inadequacy is also assigned as error. Upon the latter assignment, we find no error, prejudicial to the appellant.
The bus company does not appeal.
Did the court err in dismissing the cab company at the close of the evidence of appellant? The dismissal was absolute. It was not a dismissal without prejudice. The appellant is barred from again suing the cab company. The final judgment in the case dismisses the cab company completely from the proceeding. This can only be justified if there was no evidence showing that the cab company, or its employees, were negligent, or that such negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury of which the appellant complains.
The basis for the action of the court is found in the relationship of the cab driver to the cab company.
It appears that the cab company owns some seventy-five cabs. Each morning a number of cab drivers present themselves at the office of the company and deposit the sum of $4.25. A cab is then delivered into the custody of the driver, and he can do with it as he *486 wills. Any revenue collected by the driver is his own personal property. Many of the drivers frequent cab stands in the city. Calls are received by the cab company for taxi service. These calls are relayed to the stands and the driver first in line is permitted to answer the call. The cabs bear the name of the cab company, and the company advertises cab service. There is manifestly no relationship of master and servant developed by such facts. Reasonable minds could not differ on this point.
Were the plaintiff in this case an injured passenger in one of the taxicabs in question, the doctrine of estoppel, holding out, and implied agency would present questions for the jury.
It is contended that such doctrines are applicable to cases where the injured party has not been induced to rely on the circumstances creating implied agency. We are not cited to, nor do we find, any controlling authority for such contention.
The question present where a master is sought to be held liable for the acts of one who may be either a servant or independent contractor or lessee is the right to control the acts of the individual directly responsible for the tort. See 26 Ohio Jurisprudence, 624; 21 Ohio Jurisprudence, 624, citing Tiffin v.McCormack,
We fail to find any evidence indicating that the cab company had the right reserved to exercise any control over the acts of the cab drivers after the cab was turned over to him in the morning. The court, therefore committed no error in dismissing the cab company from the action.
Finding no error in the record prejudicial to the appellant, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas.
Judgment affirmed.
HAMILTON, J., concurs. *487
Dissenting Opinion
Without reciting a contrasting analysis of the evidence, my conclusion is that the record presents evidence from which conflicting inferences could be drawn as to whether the operator was an independent contractor or the employee of the Parkway Cabs, Inc., and that, therefore, it presents an issue for the jury.
I agree with my associates that there is no evidence that the defendants were joint tort-feasors. They were, therefore, improperly joined.
The court would have been justified in requiring an election, which would have resulted in the dismissal of one of the defendants without prejudice.
I believe the judgment of dismissal should be modified by providing that the dismissal of Parkway Cabs, Inc., is without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiff.
The judgment against the Ohio Bus Line Company should be affirmed.