Appellant, Frank E. Milgate, loaned his automobile to Hugh Cunningham, who took appellant’s daughter,
Subdivision (a) of section 402 of the Vehicle Code provides : “Every owner of a motor vehicle is liable and responsible for the death of or injury to person or property resulting from negligence in the operation of such motor vehicle, in the business of such owner or otherwise, by any person using or operating the same with the permission, express or implied, of such owner and the negligence of such person shall he imputed to the owner for all purposes of civil damages (Italics added. ) The italicized portion was added by amendment in 1937.
Appellant contends that the above-quoted section should be so construed as to limit the imputation of negligence to actions by third persons against the owner. Whatever might have been the proper construction prior to the 1937 amendment, it is now clear that since the passage of that amendment, said section is not susceptible of such construction. The phrase
Appellant refers to the case of
Mills
v.
Gabriel,
“Counsel for plaintiff freely admits that the Legislature has fastened upon his client herein a new responsibility (unknown at common law). He claims, however, that it is a responsibility to answer to others for damage done to them and that the common-law immunity from the negligence of the bailee still exists when the damage is to bailor’s car and the bailor is a plaintiff rather than a defendant.
“I do not so construe the statute. Do the words ‘responsible for . . . injuries to . . . property’ fix responsibility for injuries only to property of others ? The statute does not so state. Where are the words that exempt the bailor’s property from this ‘responsibility’? To hold with plaintiff’s counsel in his argument would be to interpolate into the statute something which is not there in order to create an inequality among users of the highways which would be as shocking as it would be unjust.
“Judge Wilder, in Darrohn v. Russell,154 Misc. 753 , 754, 277 N. Y. S. 783, 785, stated the problem thus: ‘But, in abrogating the common-law rule of non-liability where the car is not operated in the owner’s service, does the statute destroy both immunities or but one ? Is it both a sword and a shield ? Does it impale him upon a new liability to third persons but protect him from responsibility for his own damage?’
“Judge Wilder goes on to conclude that the owner is barred by the negligence of his bailee, adding that ‘he shall not be permitted to capitalize a situation identical with that for which he is expressly made responsible, and, in the phrase of Judge Tompkins of this court, that the Legislature has not generated and the courts will not sponsor, a hybrid offspring. ’
“Directly contra is the decision of the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, in Gochee v. Wagner,232 App. Div. 401 , 403, 250 N. Y. S. 102, 105. [Cited and relied upon by the court in Mills v. Gabriel, supra.] There, by a divided court, two justices dissenting, it was held that ‘While the statute is remedial, it is remedial solely in favor of an injured thirdperson. It is not to be wrenched ont of its intended purpose and its language distorted in order to conform it to the conventional pattern of common-law agency. ’ Also contra is Nannes v. Ideal Garage, Inc., 150 Misc. 522 , 269 N. Y. S. 777, decided by the Appellate Term, First Department.
“Gochee v. Wagner, supra, was reversed by the Court of Appeals,257 N. Y. 344 ,178 N. E. 553 , but the reversal is based upon the ground that, since the owner or bailor was present in his car at the time of the accident and had dominion over it, the statute did not apply and the common law made him responsible for his operator’s negligence. Thus the decision rests upon common-law grounds and is not helpful to the problem at bar. . . .
“The shocking effect of the holding of the Appellate Division in the Gochee case could hardly have been more strikingly illustrated than in the trial of the case at bar, for tried with it before the same jury was a companion action in which the present plaintiffs were defendants and the defendant Brennan was the plaintiff. He sued for damages to his motorbus. Was the jury to be charged in the case at bar that the sole issue was the negligence of the defendant, because the negligence of John Benza (even if found) could not bar the recovery of Bose J. Benza, and at the same time be charged in the case of Brennan v. Benza that Bose J. Benza was answerable for the negligence of John Benza?
“An even greater absurdity was presented in the City Court of Rochester in Darrohn v. Russell, supra. There two borrowed ears collided, each being operated upon the business of the borrower. The owners sued each other for damages to the respective cars. Both drivers were found to be negligent. The judgment of the court, following Gochee v. Wagner, would be to award each his damage against the other. Is it any wonder that Judge Wilder declined to sponsor such a ‘hybrid offspring’?”
If this court were to accept appellant’s contention and confine imputed negligence to actions by third persons against an owner, situations as absurd as those referred to by Judge King would inevitably arise at some future time. It is reasonable to assume that the Legislature had this in mind when it passed the 1937 amendment imputing negligence to the owner for all purposes of civil damages.
Other jurisdictions have passed upon the question involved
There is no merit to appellant’s contention that the imputing of a borrower’s negligence to the owner in an action against a third party will violate the settled law that a bailor may recover from a bailee for the latter’s negligence in injuring the bailed property. It is obvious that section 402 of the Vehicle Code has no effect on the bailor-bailee relationship in actions by the bailor against the bailee.
It is further contended by appellant that if section 402 of the Vehicle Code prevents recovery from a third person by an owner because of imputed negligence, then said section is unconstitutional under article IV, section 24, of the state Constitution, in that the subject is not mentioned in the title. The title of the original act reads (Stats. 1929, p. 566): “An act to add a new section to the Civil Code to be numbered 171414, relating to imputed negligence. ’ ’ In 1935 this section became 402a of the Vehicle Code. The title to the 1937 amendment reads (Stats. 1937, p. 2353): “An act to amend sections 402, 404, 410, and 415 of the Vehicle Code, and to add thereto sections 410.5, 415.5, 417 and 418, relating to civil liability and financial responsibility of owners and operators of vehicles.” The phrase “relating to imputed negligence” in
The trial court properly concluded that under section 402 of the Vehicle Code the negligence of a borrower of a ear should be imputed to the owner in an action by the owner against a third party.
The judgment is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Houser, J., Carter, J., and Traynor, J., concurred.
