OPINION
This is a negligent entrustment case. Loom Craft Carpet Mills, Inc. and Wayne Moureau appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of William Farrel Gorrell and Jo Ann Gorrell.
On the night of May 30, 1987, William Farrel Gorrell was run over by a truck driven by Wayne Moureau’s stepson, Kenneth Christopher Moureau (Chris). Gorrell, Chris, and one other man had been drinking alcoholic beverages all evening and were intoxicated. During the ride home there was a sharp dispute, and Chris ordered Gorrell to get out of the truck. While getting out, Gorrell tripped and fell. He did not manage to get clear of the truck before Chris drove away. The right rear tire rolled over Gorrell, crushing his femur (the bone between the knee and the pelvis).
The Gorrells sued Chris for negligence. Chris did not answer, and a default judgment was taken against him. 1 Gorrell then sued Wayne Moureau and Loom Craft Carpet Mills, Inc. for negligently entrusting the truck to Chris. The jury found in favor of the Gorrells, and judgment was entered accordingly.
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Moureau and Loom Craft complain that the court erred in failing to submit an issue as to the comparative negligence attributable to Wayne Moureau and Loom Craft. The jury found Chris eighty-five percent at fault and Gorrell fifteen percent at fault. Moureau proffered a substitute special issue, rejected by the trial judge, which would have divided the 100% of fault among Moureau, Loom Craft, Chris, and Gorrell.
Moureau cites
Dabney v. Home Insurance Co.,
Negligent entrustment liability is derivative in nature.
See Rodgers v. McFarland,
[[]]•
*433 The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Chris was in prison at the time of trial, having been convicted of a murder unrelated to this case.
. Any portion of this opinion between double brackets is not to be published.
. We are aware of, and decline to follow, cases from other jurisdictions in which fault was apportioned to the entrustor.
See McCart v. Muir,
