258 P. 88 | Cal. | 1927
This is an action by plaintiff for personal injuries received by him in June, 1922. Said injuries were caused by the act of one Robert Miotti and the question of negligence is not an issue on this appeal. Plaintiff alleged a cause of action against each of the defendants, Charles A. Mowry and The Chronicle Publishing Company, a corporation, under the rule of respondeat superior. The trial developed into a contest between these two defendants as to whose servant Miotti was in the doing of the act out of which plaintiff's cause of action arose. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant Mowry and against the defendant Chronicle Publishing Company. The latter has appealed and presents as the sole issue for our determination a question which may be stated thus: Was the evidence sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that Miotti, at the time and place in question and in the doing of the act causing the injury to plaintiff, the servant of appellant and acting within the scope of his employment?
Appellant at the time in question and for many years prior thereto owned, published, and distributed a large metropolitan daily morning newspaper. It is admitted that the distribution of this paper to the various carriers to be delivered over the state and elsewhere was under the jurisdiction and control of one Pirie, a servant of appellant, called the superintendent of the mail-room. To facilitate the daily delivery of papers to the carriers for distribution Mowry and appellant in the year 1919 entered into a written hauling contract which was to be in existence for the period of one year, the essence of which was that Mowry was "to do all of the hauling of newspapers from their Mail Room in the Chronicle Building to ferries, depots or post offices for transportation outside the city of San Francisco, also two loads to Oakland each week. . . ." The contract then *612 named the compensation and concluded with these clauses: "This agreement to remain in effect for one year from August 10, 1919, at which time I (meaning Mowry) am to have the option of renewing this agreement for two years.
"It is understood that the Chronicle Publishing Company may terminate this agreement at any time should the service rendered not be satisfactory to them. It is also understood that I am to carry adequate compensation, public liability and property damage insurance."
The evidence shows that no additional written contract was ever executed by the parties, but that from time to time the compensation of Mowry was increased. It is also admitted that Pirie had the right to employ and discharge all help in connection with the mail-room department. It is also admitted that on the day in question, and for several years prior thereto, said Robert Miotti was and had been in the general employ of the appellant and under the direction of said Pirie and that his wages were exclusively paid by appellant. It is also admitted that on an average of three nights per week and at times when the issue of said paper was of more than twenty-six pages, pursuant to the direction of said Pirie, said Miotti, between the hours of 10 o'clock P.M. and 5 o'clock A.M. of the same night, had as his exclusive duty the work of assisting Mowry's servant in loading papers at the mail-room; accompanying said truck to the place of discharge and there assisting in unloading said papers in order that they might be delivered on schedule and reach the place of distribution at the time desired by appellant. It was in so unloading certain bundles of papers at the pier that the accident happened which resulted in injury to plaintiff. It is also conceded that Mowry's interest in the transaction ceased when the delivery of the papers had been made at the various points specified by appellant, but appellant's interests did not cease at that time. It was scrupulously solicitous and active in seeing that the papers reached the various carriers on schedule and arrived at the various points at the time they were expected. The object in ordering Miotti to assist Mowry was to insure this prompt dispatch of the papers so that no delay might result in their delivery. The greater the size of the paper, the greater the weight and, the item of time being of the essence, the need *613 for assistance in order to meet the schedule for delivery was imperative and in reality an emergency.
Appellant, however, strongly insists that Miotti at the time and place in question occupied the status of a general servant loaned to an independent contractor for a specific or special service and that Miotti was, therefore, in the doing of the act causing plaintiff's injury, the servant of Mowry and not its servant.
The fact is that for many years prior to the happening of this accident and before the contract with Mowry appellant had used Miotti for the identical work in which he was engaged on the night of this accident. As pointed out above, it is also true that on the nights in question Miotti performed no other work whatsoever for appellant except the work of assisting the delivery of these papers. It is also true that this service was performed by Miotti upon the orders of Pirie, except in a few cases when Pirie would neglect or forget to issue the order and Mowry or his servant would make a request for Miotti's help. Inasmuch as no additional written contract was ever executed by the parties, the presence of Miotti on the truck and the fact that for three nights each week he was exclusively engaged in aiding the dispatch of this work, coupled with the further fact that Mowry exercised the right to demand a helper on these special nights, in case it was forgotten or neglected by Pirie, would warrant the jury in believing that by the conduct of the parties, if not expressly, they had contracted that appellant should furnish a man to aid in the work, which said work was of interest to both parties. The jury could even have found under the evidence that Miotti was at the time, pursuant to the orders of Pirie, really in charge of the deliveries. Certain it is that appellant was so vitally interested in the dispatch of the work that the jury could have found that appellant's servant and Mowry's servant were at the time of the accident jointly engaged in a work of mutual interest to the parties, and this is true even if it be conceded that Miotti, after being ordered to this service, thereafter took his orders as to the details thereof from the servant of Mowry. [1] It is a well-recognized principle that where the servants of two parties are jointly engaged in a work of mutual interest each employee is the servant of his own master and neither of the employees is the servant of *614 the other's master. This principle has been stated as follows:
"Servants of separate masters, altho engaged in a common undertaking, are not fellow servants. To constitute that relation, servants must be in the employ of, or controlled by, a common master.
"If, with a view to expediting the business or furthering the interests of his general master, the servant assists the servants of another in their work, he is not the fellow servant of those whom he is assisting, altho, acting under general orders from his employer to assist such servants, he does so at their request." (39 Corpus Juris, sec. 668, pp. 557, 558.)
The case of Cannon v. Fargo,
In the case of Mandada v. Wells,
[2] Under the principle announced above the fact that one servant may have taken orders as to details from the servant of the other employer would not affect this rule. "A servant of one employer does not become the servant of another for whom the work is performed merely because the latter points out the work to the servant, or gives him signals calling the service into activity, or gives him directions as to the details of the work and the manner of doing it." (39 Corpus Juris, sec. 1462, p. 1275. See, also, Quinby Co. v. Estey,
[3] Moreover, under the evidence, it may well be doubted whether the jury would have been justified had it found that *616
the services of Miotti had been loaned to Mowry under such circumstances as to make Miotti the servant of Mowry and not the servant of appellant. It is, of course, well recognized in this state that a servant may be loaned by his master to another so that the act done by the servant becomes the act of the master to whom he has been loaned and for the time being the general master is not responsible for his acts. (Burns v. Jackson,
In the recent case of Billig v. Southern Pacific Co.,
Again, quoting from 39 Corpus Juris, section 1462, page 1275: "To escape liability the original master must resign full control of the servant for the time being, it not being sufficient that the servant is partially under the control of a third person; and it is necessary to distinguish between authoritative direction and control and mere suggestions as to details or the necessary co-operation where the work furnished is part of a larger operation."
A familiar illustration of the lack of full control is found in the case of Chamberlain v. Lee,
"This does not make out a case of lending a servant. The servant was put under the control of plaintiff for one purpose alone. That is, to move the car up and down as plaintiff desired while the particular job was being done. The elevator car was put under the control of the plaintiff for the time, but it was put under his control along with its attendant, who remained in the service of the defendants. There is nothing to show that plaintiff could have discharged this boy, and put another boy to running the elevator at this time. Plaintiff certainly had no right to use this elevator boy for any purpose in connection with the work other than running the elevator up and down. The plaintiff could not have required the elevator boy to remain on duty for a longer period than his regular hours under his contract with defendants.
"In order to escape responsibility for the negligence of his servant on the theory that the servant has been loaned, the original master must resign full control of the servant for the time being." See, to the same effect, Flori v. Dolph, supra, and Billig v. Southern Pacific Co., supra, opinion on rehearing.
[4] It must be borne in mind that the jury had a large latitude in accepting or rejecting the evidence of the witnesses, and particularly that of Miotti. (Burns v. Jackson, supra.) And when this latitude is allowed the jury, the evidence was such as to render it impossible for us to say as a matter of law that the verdict was unwarranted.
Judgment affirmed.
Curtis, J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Langdon, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied. *618