133 A. 667 | Conn. | 1926
Defendant engaged Schmidt and Stack, who were in the business of general repairs connected with the electrical equipment of automobiles and batteries, to get her car, which stalled while she was driving in the city of Stamford, and repair the same. At about five o'clock in the afternoon of the same day, defendant telephoned Schmidt and Stack asking to speak to the battery man, whom she did not know. She inquired of him whether her car was ready, and he told her it was. She then inquired of him, "Would you, as a special favor, bring the car over to the church," where she then was; he told her he would. Schmidt and Stack never delivered cars, after their repair, to their owners. The battery man, Newman, was *469 not then a licensed driver, and the nature of his work did not require him to have a license to drive an automobile; when defendant requested him to bring her car to the church, he had ended his day's work for Schmidt and Stack and was about to leave for his home. Newman at once started to take the car to the church, as requested by defendant, and on the way negligently injured plaintiff.
The court reached the conclusion that the injuries to the plaintiff were the result of the negligence of Newman while acting as the servant and agent of defendant when driving her car. Defendant's appeal is pursued upon the single point, that Newman, at the time of the injuries to plaintiff, was the agent of Schmidt and Stack and not of the defendant. Her counsel supports her contention upon the theory that Schmidt and Stack held defendant's car under the class of bailments known as locatio operis faciendi, therefore it was their duty to deliver the car when repaired to defendant's home, had not the defendant consented to its delivery to her at the church, and that while the car was held under this bailment and before delivery to her, defendant was not responsible for any injury arising from the operation of the car while being delivered to her, but that the operator of the car, Newman, was at this time the agent of Schmidt and Stack. The conclusion of the trial court that Newman was the agent of the defendant was one of fact and not reviewable unless the subordinate facts are legally inconsistent with this finding. Russo v. McAviney,
The claim that Newman was the agent of Schmidt and Stack is rested upon the claim of law that, under the terms of this bailment, Schmidt and Stack were in duty bound to redeliver defendant's car at her residence, and further, that upon the facts found Newman *470
was the agent of Schmidt and Stack and not of the defendant. Counsel relies upon Douglass v. Hart,
There was no contract or custom which required Schmidt and Stack to deliver defendant's car, either at her residence or any place designated by her. These repairmen, in the conduct of their business, never made such deliveries. So far as this record shows they never authorized any of their employees to make such a delivery. Nor in the instant case did they authorize Newman to deliver the defendant's car at the church. The delivery of the car by Newman could not have been contemplated by Schmidt and Stack. He not only had no authority to act in such a matter for his employers, but did not even have a license to drive a car. He was not acting in the course of his employment, but after it was at an end, and in driving defendant's car he was not benefiting his employers but the defendant. The circumstances under which he came to act indicate that the defendant knew that he was not acting for his employers, but was doing this as a favor to her. Under these circumstances, the trial court was justified in drawing the inference of fact, from all these circumstances, that Newman was, at the time that he caused the plaintiff to suffer his injuries, the agent of the defendant and not of his employers. We certainly cannot hold that the trial court's inference as to the agency of Newman was one which the reasoning mind could not reasonably draw from the subordinate facts. To hold the trial court in error would, under our rule, require us to reach this precise conclusion.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, except HAINES, J., who dissented.