Thе parties stipulated to the following facts. On 18 December 1991, defendant Harold A. Erixon (Erixon) was the owner and operator of a 1990 White GMC highway tractor which he had leased, by an independent contractor service agreement, to defendant Chemical Leaman Tank Lines, Inc. (Chemical Leaman). The tractor bore an Interstate Commerce Commission (I.C.C.) identification code registered to Chemical Leaman. The contract between the lessee Chemical Leaman, a common carrier, and the lessor Erixon, the independent contractor and driver of the tractor which hauled Chemical Leaman’s trailer, was governed by Interstate Commеrce Commission rules and regulations.
On 17 December 1991, Erixon left Texas with his tractor pulling a Chemical Leaman trailer loaded with materials bound for the DuPont plant near Wilmington, North Carolina. Erixon arrived in North Carolina on the morning of 18 December 1991 and dropped the trailer at the Chemical Leaman yard. That afternoon, Erixon went off duty and departed the yard in his tractor bound for Trenton, North Carolina on a personal trip to visit his son. It was Erixon’s intention to reattach the trailer to his tractor early on the morning of 19 December 1991 and deliver the trailer to the DuPont plant. While he was traveling to his son’s house, Erixon crossed the centerline and collided head-on with plaintiff, James M. Parker.
On 13 October 1992, James Parker and his wife, Patsy, filed a civil action against Erixon and Chemical Leaman for injuries and damages resulting from the motor vehicle collision. Erixon filed an answer to the complaint on 25 November 1992 denying negligence and alleging sudden emergency and contributory negligence. On 30 November 1992, Chemical Leaman filеd an answer and crossclaim contending it was not liable for Erixon’s negligence under North Carolina state law *385 because Erixon was neither employed by nor under the direction or control of Chemical Leaman when the accident occurred. Erixon filed a reply to the crossclaim on 3 December 1993. Pursuant to Rule 41(a)(1) of the Nоrth Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, plaintiffs and Chemical Leaman filed a dismissal with prejudice of all claims against Erixon on 29 March 1994.
Chemical Leaman filed a motion for summary judgment against plaintiffs. This, motion was heard by the court at the 6 February 1994 term of the Civil Superior Court for Pender County. On 28 November 1994, the court entered an order denying Chemicаl Leaman’s motion for summary judgment and granting plaintiffs’ Rule 56 motion for summary judgment as to the issue of agency between Chemical Leaman and Erixon. The trial court’s order stated “there exists in law and fact an irrebuttable presumption of agency between the Defendant, Chemical Leaman Tank Lines, Inc. and the Defendant, Harold A. Erixon.” From this ordеr, Chemical Leaman appeals.
The question for this Court is whether the law supports the trial court’s conclusion that there is an irrebuttable presumption of agency between the carrier, Chemical Leaman, and the independent contractor, Harold Erixon. If so, then Chemical Leaman will be held strictly liable for all of Erixon’s actions, regardless of whether Erixon was acting outside the scope of his employment at the time the negligent act occurred. Our state courts have only briefly addressed this issue and the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals has only dealt with the issue of liability when an independent contractor hauling cargo under a carrier’s I.C.C. authority is acting within the scope of employment with the carrier.
See Proctor v. Colonial Refrigerated Transportation, Inc.,
The I.C.C. regulation at issue in this case is the provision entitled “Exclusive possession and responsibilities
The lease [between independent contractor and carrier] shall provide that the authorized carrier lessee shall have exclusive possession, control, and use of the equipment for the duration of the leаse. The lease shall further provide that the authorized carrier lessee shall assume complete responsibility for the operation of the equipment for the duration of the lease.
49 C.F.R. Chapter X § 1057.12(c)(1) (1995) (emphasis added). This language has caused confusion and two lines of authority have
*386
emerged on this issue, being .a rebuttable versus an irrebuttable presumption of agency (employment) between the independent contractor and the сarrier.
Wyckoff v. Marsh Bros. Trucking,
Under the rebuttable presumption of agency view, an employment relationship is presumed between the parties bound by the I.C.C. regulations, but this is rebuttable, and “the carrier-lessee’s liability is ultimately determined by resort to common-law doctrines such as
respondeat superior”
which generally operate to make the principal vicariously liablе for the tortious acts committed by the agent within the scope of the agent’s employment.
Id.; See also Wilcox v. Transamerican Freight Lines, Inc.,
A second line of authority is that the I.C.C. regulations creаte an irrebuttable presumption of agency between parties, which is referred to as the doctrine of statutory employment.
Wyckoff,
The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals considered whether a carrier is liable for the negligent acts of an independent contractor when the contractor is operating within the business of the carrier in
Proctor v. Colonial Refrigerated Transportation, Inc.,
*387
Since
Proctor
was decided, the I.C.C. regulations have been reorganized.
See Ryder Truck Rental Co., Inc. v. UTF Carriers, Inc.,
Nothing in the provisions required by paragraph (c)(1) of this section is intended to affect whether the lessor or driver provided by the lessor is an independent contractor or an employee of the authorized carrier lessee. An independent contractor relationship may exist when a carrier lessee complies with 49 U.S.C. 11107 and attendant administrative requirements.
49 C.F.R. Chapter X § 1057.12(c)(4). This new provision, according to the
Penn
Court, “confirm[ed] the Commission’s view that the type of control required by the [I.C.C.] regulation^] does not affect ‘employment’ status and that it is not the intention of the regulations to affect the relationship between a motor carrier lessee and the independent owner-operator lessor.”
Penn,
Those cases find that an employer-employee relationship between lessee-lessor is mandated by the provision of 49 C.F.R. § 1057.12(c)(1), which places exclusive possession, control, use and operation of the leased equipment under the lessor. This Court beliеves that is a misinterpretation of the regulation, especially with the hindsight provided by the 1992 amendment to 49 C.F.R. § 1057.12(c).
Id.
I.C.C. decisions appear to support the
Penn
court’s view. In
Ex Parte No. MC-203 Petition to Amend Lease and Interchange of
*388
Vehicle Regulations,
The Commission’s regulations are silent on the agency status of lessors, and our decisions are clear that the Cоmmission has taken no position on the issue of independence of lessors. However, we are convinced by the comments that the proposed amendment will serve a useful purpose and should be adopted....
While most courts have correctly interpreted the appropriate scope of the contrоl regulation and have held that the type of control required by the regulation does not affect “employment” status, it has been shown here that some courts and State workers’ compensation and employment agencies have relied on our current control regulation and have held the language to be prima facie evidence of an employer-employee relationship. These State agencies often find that the current regulation evidences the type of control that is indicative of an employer-employee relationship.
We conclude that adopting the proposed amendment will reinforce our view of the neutral еffect of the control regulation and place our stated view squarely before any court or agency asked to interpret the regulation’s impact. ... By presenting a clear statement of the neutrality of the regulation, we hope to bring a halt to erroneous assertions about the effect and intent of the contrоl regulation, saving both the factfinders and the carriers time and expense.
Ex Parte No. MC-203,
*389
While our state courts have not directly addressed this question, plaintiffs contend the facts of an earlier North Carolina case,
Brown v. Truck Lines,
Hence it would seem to follow that control of the operation for the period of the lease was given to the licensed carrier, and that the owner-driven truck was in contemрlation of law in its employ and the driver for the trip stood on the relationship of its employee, as found by the Industrial Commission.
We think the applicable rule, under the facts here presented, is that the lease or contract by which the equipment of the authorized interstate carrier was augmented, must be interpreted as carrying thе necessary implication that possession and control of the added vehicle was, for the trip, vested in the authorized operator.
Id.
at 304-05,
*390
In two later cases, this Court answered insurance coverage questions for parties subject to the I.C.C. regulations and in each case, the Court briefly addressed the issue of carrier liability.
See McLean Trucking Co.,
A year later this Court suggested North Carolina follows the rebuttable presumption of agency and imposes liability on the carrier only when the independent contractor is acting in the course and scope of his employment when our Court said:
[W]e look to the public policy behind I.C.C. regulations, which imposes strict liability on the lessee-motor carrier for injuries to third parties when the lessor-independent contractor is operating in the course and scope of the business of the lessee-motor carrier. That policy is to prevent the motor carrier from avoiding safety standards (and insurance requirements) imposed by I.C.C. regulаtions by leasing equipment from non-regulated independent contractors.
Reeves,
The I.C.C. regulations were not intended to impose upon carriers using leased equipment or the services of independent contractors greater liability than that imposed when a carrier uses its own equipment or employees. Under North Carolina law, liability of an owner of a motor vehicle for the acts of his employee is governed by the principle of
respondeat superior. See McNair v. Lend Lease Trucks, Inc.,
*391 Having decided North Carolina follows the rebuttable presumption of agency, we now turn to the question of whether the trial court committed reversible error when it denied Chemical Leaman’s summary judgment and granted plaintiffs’ summary judgment as to the issue of agency between Chemical Leaman and Erixon. Specifically, Chemical Leaman contends it is entitled to summary judgment because Erixon, the owner of the tractor, deviated from the lease agreement with Chemical Leaman and was acting outside the scope of his authority when the accident occurred. We agree.
Summary judgment is granted by the trial court when there are no genuine issues as to material facts and where the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 56(c);
Ballenger v. Crowell,
The parties have already stipulated to the facts which are critical in this appeal: Erixon leased his GMC tractor tо Chemical Leaman under an independent contractor service agreement. Since Erixon did not have I.C.C. numbers of his own, his tractor bore Chemical Leaman’s I.C.C. number and operated in interstate commerce only under the authority of Chemical Leaman’s I.C.C. permits. On the afternoon of 18 December 1991, Erixon “went off duty and left in the traсtor to drive to Trenton, North Carolina to visit his son. The trip from Wilmington to Trenton and back to Wilmington was purely personal.” On the way to his son’s house, Erixon collided head-on with James Parker. Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, Chemical Leaman is not liable for Erixon’s actions while Erixon was acting outside the scope of his employment. We therefore reverse the order of the trial court and remand for entry of summary judgment in favor of defendant Chemical Leaman.
Reversed and remanded.
