133 A. 270 | Md. | 1926
The sole question in this case is whether there is uncontradicted evidence rebutting the presumption that the defendant's chauffeur, while driving her automobile at the time of its collision with the plaintiff's car, was acting within the scope of his employment. It is conceded that negligence on the part of the defendant's chauffeur was proved by legally sufficient evidence to have caused the accident. No personal injury resulted from the collision, but the plaintiff's car was damaged, and in this suit, for the amount of the repair bill, he recovered a judgment, from which the defendant has appealed.
The accident happened about eleven o'clock at night, as the defendant's automobile was being driven northwardly on Park Heights Avenue in the suburbs of Baltimore. The defendant's chauffeur was the only occupant of her car. During the afternoon of the same day he had conveyed the defendant in the automobile to the home of her daughter, where she spent the evening. The car was being driven *468 in the direction of her daughter's home at the time of the collision. It was testified by the defendant that her chauffeur was under instructions to return for her at half-past ten o'clock. At his request she had given him car fare to "go for his supper." When she was notified of the accident, the defendant learned for the first time that the car had not remained on her daughter's premises. Her impression was that it had been left there by the chauffeur. It had not been driven elsewhere that evening by her order. On cross-examination she testified in part as follows: "Q. Did you tell your chauffeur when to call for you? A. About half-past ten he usually called for me. Q. He usually called for you in the machine to bring you home? A. Yes. Q. Was he to call for you in the machine to bring you home that night about half-past ten? A. He was to call for me. Q. He was to call for you? A. Yes, he was to take me home from there. Q. You visit your daughter very frequently? A. I do on and off. I have not a specified time to visit her. Q. Of course, not a specified time, but would you say about once a week? A. About. Q. And your chauffeur would come from the garage out to Park Heights Avenue to your daughter's to get you, would he not? A. That I don't know. He is supposed to remain there and wait for me. Q. But he did not always remain? A. I never watched him. He is supposed to be there."
The chauffeur did not testify. He was not in the service of the defendant when the case was tried, and apparently could not be located.
The policeman who notified the defendant of the accident and accompanied her when she went in a taxicab to the place of the collision, testified that she asked the chauffeur "what he was doing with the car," but to this inquiry he appears to have made no reply.
There is no other testimony reflecting upon the question raised by the single exception in the record, which complains of the refusal of the trial court to withdraw the case from the jury on the theory that, according to the uncontradicted *469 evidence, the chauffeur operating the defendant's automobile "was not at the time of the accident engaged in any act or duty connected with the business" of his employer. The exception was also directed to the plaintiff's granted prayer, which submitted for the jury's consideration the question whether the chauffeur was acting within the scope of his employment when the accident occurred.
The proof that the automobile which collided with the plaintiff's car was owned by the defendant, and driven by her chauffeur, created a presumption that he was then engaged in the performance of a duty incident to the service for which he was employed. Salowitch v. Kres,
Judgment affirmed, with costs.