The appellant corporation is a professional hockey club whose goalie, Don Caley, was injured in an automobile accident allegedly caused by the negligent conduct of the appellee, Peter B. Hirmer. Appellant seeks recovery of out-of-pocket expenses in hiring and employing a substitute goalie during the remainder of the term of the contract. The hockey club only seeks damages for actual expenses, not general damages for injuries to the employee nor damages for loss of profits.
The trial court granted appellee’s motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The sole issue on review is whether a complaint for compensatory damages by an employer against a person negligently injurying its employee states a cause of action. The issue is one of first impression in Arizona.
Some courts have disposed of the issue on the grounds that the damages suffered by the employer were too speculative and contingent to be considered by a court. Cain v. Vollmer,
Older cases recognized a master’s cause of action against a third person tortiously injuring a servant. The action was apparently based upon the particular social status of a master and servant at the time. Just as a father can recover for the loss of services of his child, and a husband can recover for loss sustained by injuries to his wife, a master could recover for the loss of services of his servant, who at that time was a member of the master’s household and occupied a quasi-familial relationship with him. Crab Orchard Improvement Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry.,
Appellant correctly states Arizona’s position as to the traditional duty requirement: the existence of a duty to the plaintiff is a prerequisite to tort liability. Wilson v. City of Tucson,
The Supreme Court of Oregon recently considered a similar case and reduced the problem to that of interference with contractual relationship, an intentional tort. They concluded that “[t]o be actionable an interference must be a knowing and not an inadvertent or incidental invasion of plaintiff’s [employer’s] contractual interest.” Snow v. West,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s granting of the motion to dismiss.
CAMERON, V. C. J., did not participate in the determination of this matter; HAIRE, Chief Judge, Court of Appeals, Division 1, sat in his stead.
