80 A.D. 295 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The plaintiff has recovered a judgment for damages for personal injuries. While standing on the sidewalk of a street of the city, with his back to the roadway, talking to an acquaintance, he was struck by a truck which had been swung around and was being backed over the sidewalk for the purpose of discharging its load. The truck was owned by Mr. Stainton, and the driver was about to deliver certain goods from Perkins, Goodwin & Co. to their
The appellant further insists that the question of the liability of Perkins, Goodwin & Co. should have been submitted to the jury on the theory that although it is true that if the defendants were joint tort feasors either or both might be held responsible, and, therefore, though one might not complain that the other was discharged, yet if the jury found Stainton liable, it could not find Perkins, Goodwin & Co. liable, and vice versa,, inasmuch as either one or the other was, at the time, master of the driver of the truck. Howard v. Ludwig (57 App. Div. 94) and Baldwin v. Abraham, (Id. 67, both affd., 171 N. Y. 507,677) are cited as authorities for this contention. And it is urged that many of the essential features which warranted the submissions to the jury in those cases appear in the case at bar. As any liability in Perkins, Goodwin & Co. must arise from the relation of master and servant, we must inquire whether the evidence required the submission of the question of their mastership to the jury as one of mixed law and fact. (Baldwin v. Abraham, supra, and authorities cited.) In the Baldwin, case Hirschberg, J., said: “ The recent decisions in this State seem to be uniform in the assertion that the true test as to whether the relation of master and servant exists is not necessarily the payment of wages, but is whether at the time of the injury complained of the alleged servant is engaged in the business of the alleged master, and subject to his direction and control. It is not so much the actual exercise of control which is regarded, as the right to exercise such control.” The plaintiff’s case showed as follows: Perkins, Goodwin & Co. were wholesale paper dealers. The firm did not own any trucking horses, nor does it appear that they owned any trucks. Stainton was a boss cartman, who owned a large number of trucks and horses, and worked for Perkins, Goodwin & Co. and other business houses. He employed a superintendent, a foreman and truckmen, and carted goods for Perkins, Goodwin & Co. under a contract, at a certain price per ton. When Perkins, Goodwin & Co. “ have
But in the case at bar there appears, as I have shown, a principal who was under a contract with Perkins, Goodwin & Co., and who was at the same time engaged in similar work for other firms. This principal kept control over his own subordinates, including his drivers. There is not a particle of' evidence to establish that there was any relation between Perkins, Goodwin & Co. and the driver of the truck in question, except that the owner of the truck, who was the employer of the driver, was under contract with them to do trucking for them, and that in order to do the work he received a description of the goods, their present place, and their destination, with receipts to show their delivery, and that thereupon he did his work in his own way, and by his' own teams and drivers. If the
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett and Woodward, JJ., concurred; Hirschberg, J., dissented upon the ground that the facts that the appellant was known as the “ boss cartman” of the firm, transacted his business on the firm’s premises, and for a considerable period of time had the firm’s name upon his trucks, with their knowledge and without their disapproval, are sufficient to require a submission of the question to the jury.
Judgment and order.affirmed, with costs.