127 Iowa 601 | Iowa | 1905
At the time of the accident causing the plaintiff’s injuries the defendant was a dealer in agricultural implements, buggies, automobiles, etc., in the city of Davenport, and his son Emil I. Buck was in his employ as a clerk. There was an automobile parade in the city of Davenpprt in the afternoon of the day in question, and, on the solicitation of the committee having the matter in charge, the defendant decorated an electric automobile belonging to him, and the machine, operated by one of his daughters, had a place in the parade. The son, Emil J., who had been employed in his father’s establishment for some time, was given a lay-off or holiday for the parade. He spent the forenoon of the day in decorating a steam automobile that he intended to use in the parade, and in the afternoon, during a part of the time that the parade was in progress, he and some of his friends used the steam machine on the streets. They then returned it to the defendant’s/place of business, and left it on the premises; and soon thereafter the son and his companions, young men and women, went to the river. In the meantime the parade was concluded, and the electric machine was returned to the defendant’s place of business Ey the' daughter, and left on the street, in front of the store. The defendant was present at the time, and directed an employe to take it in, and soon thereafter he left the store. A short time after the defendant had left the store, the son, Emil J., and a young lady friend returned thereto; and she, desiring to go home from there, accepted his invitation to ride home in the autoriiobile. He took her to her home by the nearest route, and on his way back to his father’s store the plaintiff’s horse became frightened at the machine, and the accident happened, resulting in the injury complained of.
Conceding, for the purposes of this appeal, that the son was negligently operating the machine at the time of the