147 A. 698 | Vt. | 1929
The plaintiff was injured while riding with her husband in a truck which he was driving for the defendant who employed him. The negligence of the husband, the fact that he was acting within his employment at the time, that the plaintiff was riding by permission of the defendant, and was free from contributory negligence, were established by a verdict in her favor. By a motion for a verdict seasonably filed, the defendant questioned the right of the plaintiff to recover in an action predicated upon the personal negligence of her husband, though he was then acting as the defendant's servant. This motion was overruled and the defendant excepted.
The plaintiff argues that there is nothing in the record to show that the Poulins were husband and wife at the *310
time of the accident. We take no time with this claim as the transcript plainly shows that throughout the trial everybody connected with it understood that that relation existed at the time mentioned; and while we are to construe this record against the defendant, Higgins, Admr. v. Metzger,
In support of the exception to the ruling on his motion for a verdict, the defendant insists that a wife cannot sue her husband in a tort action for negligence, and that it logically follows that she cannot sue his employer for her husband's negligence, since the employer would have an action over against the husband, and thus the allowance of an action like this one would be, in effect, an indirect action by her against her husband.
This claim of the defendant finds support in Maine v. Maine Sons Co., 198 Iowa, 1278, 201 N.W. 20, 37 A.L.R. 161; Riser v.Riser,
For the purposes of this review, we will assume that a wife cannot sue her husband for negligence, as the cases cited, and others, hold. But we cannot admit that her right to sue her husband's master is, for that reason, foreclosed. It is true, as argued, that a master may recover from an offending servant such damages as he is compelled to pay on account of the latter's negligence. But the doctrine of respondeat superior is not affected by the plaintiff's inability to sue the servant; nor does it all depend upon the right of the master to sue him. StarBrewery Co. v. Hauck,
Consonant with these views are the cases involving the contributory negligence of the husband, wherein it is generally held that from the mere relation of the parties such negligence of the husband is not to be imputed to the wife and does not bar her recovery. Thus in McDonald v. Levenson,
Reference ought, perhaps, to be made to Carlisle et ux. v.Sheldon,
Judgment affirmed. *312