62 N.Y.S. 855 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The earlier cases, down to and including Isaacs v. Third Avenue R. R. Co. (47 N. Y. 122, 128), following Wright v. Wilcox (19 Wend. 343), hold the doctrine of the learned court at Trial Term, that the master is not responsible for the wrongful or malicious acts ■of the servant, unless such injury results from the business transacted by the servant while engaged in the work of the master by his express or implied authority. The later cases, however, define the rule more closely, and hold the master to an accountability for the-conduct of the servant “ unless the fact was proved to the satisfaction of the jury that the servant willfully and maliciously, and to effect some purpose of his own, outside of. his employment, committed the-injury; in other words, that at the time of the injury, and in the act of its commission, the relation of master and servant did not exist; and to sustain the nonsuit the evidence must have been so conclusive that the jury could not have found a verdict for the plaintiff.” (Mott v. Consumers' Ice Co., 73 N. Y. 543, 549.) In the case at bar the defendant is charged with willful and malicious trespass, and with in jury to the person and property of the plaintiff; and the learned trial court directed a verdict upon the ground that, as the evidence showed that the acts complained of were those of a person alleged to be an agent of the defendant, he could not be held responsible for the willful or malicious acts of his servant, and as the defendant had denied any malice on his own part, there was no evidence, under the pleadings, to go to the jury. An exception was taken to the direction of a verdict, and the appeal is now before us.
The plaintiff had rented certain premises in the borough of Brooklyn from the defendant to be used as a bakery. Subsequently, and before the expiration of the lease, plaintiff' purchased a building in the neighborhood and fitted it up for a like purpose,
The judgment appealed from should be reversed, with^eosts, and ■a new trial granted.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted.