35 Ga. App. 760 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1926
Mrs. Annie Jackson brought suit against the Service Laundry Company, for injuries alleged to have been received by her as a result of being run over, at the corner of Washington Street and Capitol Square in the City of Atlanta, by an automobile truck belonging to the defendant. The evidence clearly authorizes an.inference that the driver of the truck negligently ran over the plaintiff and injured her. The trial judge directed a verdict for the defendant, upon the sole ground that the evidence failed to show that the driver of the truck at the time of the injury was, in operating the truck, acting within the scope of his authority as the servant of the defendant.
There was evidence for the defendant that the truck at the time was being operated by a negro in its employ by the name of Frank McDonald; that the truck was regularly operated by a man in its employ by the name of Adams, but that Frank, without authority from the defendant, had taken Mr. Adams home and was going back with the truck when the truck ran over the plaintiff. Frank testified that he was the driver of the truck at the time of the injury, but his testimony was impeached by a witness who testified that Frank had stated to him that he was not at the time the driver of the truck. Adams testified that he was at home, which was
Another witness, named Bennett, testified that he saw the truck hit the plaintiff, that he did not see any one get out of the truck after the accident and run, that he could have seen it if it had happened, that besides the plaintiff and her husband he saw another man standing back of the truck when witness got there, that this man was a white man and was not Frank McDonald, that no man ran from the truck from the time the accident happened until the witness got there, and that the witness got there in jus't a second.
From this evidence it is clearly inferable that Adams, and not Frank McDonald, was the driver of the truck at the time it ran over the plaintiff and injured her. There is evidence to the effect that Adams was in the employ of the defendant company as a driver of this truck, that, his duties were to collect and deliver laundry, and his territory for collecting and delivering laundry was 'in the neighborhood in which the accident occurred; and while the accident occurred about 7:30 at night after Adams had, ac
From the evidence we think it is clearly inferable that Adams was the driver of the car, and that he was driving it in the line of his duty as agent for the defendant to collect and deliver laundry. It being clearly inferable, from the evidence, that the driver of the car negligently ran over the plaintiff, and that the driver of the car was the agent or servant of the plaintiff acting within the scope of his authority and within his line of duty, the trial judge erred in directing a verdict for the defendant.
Judgment reversed.