The plaintiff sued the defendant, a motorcar manufacturer and dealer,, for injuries suffered while she was a passenger in a motor-ear belonging to it, and driven by one, Clemens, a sales agent in its employ, stationed at Buffalo. His territory included parts of New York and Pennsylvania, and it was his custom and duty to cover it in a motor put at his disposal by the defendant. We may assume merely for the purposes of *943 this appeal, because we do not so decide, that there was evidence that he had authority to take it also into Canada. On the day in question he set out from Buffalo on an errand to Windsor, Ontario; whether on tho defendant’s business or his own was in dispute. He invited the plaintiff to go along, and when near Welland his car careened, fell upon her and caused her very severe injuries. A-jury might have found, as this one did, that this accident was due to his reckless driving at high speed. While the plaintiff was in a hospital in Welland, Clemens, being then under arrest for criminal negligence, got from her a release of himself and the defendant from any liability; this in consideration of his promise to pay her expenses while in the hospital. She testified that at the time and as an inducement, he told her that her injuries were not serious, and that she would be about again in a few weeks; and her doctor testified that though he told her that her back was broken, he too assured her that -she would be able to leave tho hospital in a few weeks. In reliance upon these statements, she gave the release, which Clemens destroyed as soon as it had served his purpose in his prosecution.
There is a statute in Ontario which provides that "the owner of a motor vehicle shall be liable for loss or damage sustained by any person by reason of negligence in the operation of such motor vehicle on a highway unless such motor vehicle was without the owner's consent in the possession of some person other than tho owner or his chauffeur.” (Section 41-A of the Ontario Highway Traffic Act, introduced as an amendment by section 11 of chapter 30 of the Provincial Laws of 1930.) Two Canadian barristers testified as to its meaning; one, called by the plaintiff, that it was to he read literally; the other that the owner was immune if the driver, though lawfully in possession of the car, was using it altogether beyond the scope of Ms authority, o-r in unauthorized territory. The judge refused to leave to the jury the interpretation of tho section notwithstanding this difference of opinion; he told them that if the defendant had given possession of the car to Clemens, it made itself liable for his negligence. In tMs he therefore took the view of the plaintiff’s expert, and in addition he necessarily ruled that the defendant might be liable even though it had not authorized Clemens to go into the province at all. He also charged them that if the plaintiff had been induced to give the release through a mistake of fact, it would not bar her recovery; and that her contributory negligence was for them to determine; that is, whether in view of the way in which Clemens had been driving the car, she should have done more than protest, as she said she had; whether she ought to have made Mm stop, have left him and gone to her destination by some other means. The jury found a verdict of $40,000 for the plaintiff, on which judgment was entered.
The defendant raised a number of objections at the trial of which we need discuss only the following: (1) That the Ontario statute, however interpreted, could not impose liability on the defendant, even though it had authorized Clemons to take the car into that province, unless his errand was within the scope of his authority. (2) That tho statute should not be interpreted to make the owner liable if tbe driver exceeded Ms authority, or went beyond the limits to which he was restricted. (3) That the judge should at least have left to the jury the question whether the defendant had authorized Clemens to take the ear into Ontario, even though it would have been, liable if it had. (4) That the plaintiff had not proved any facts which would avoid the release. (5) That the judge should have directed a verdict against her because of her contributory negligence.
In general it is now well-settled law that the law of the place whore the putative wrongdoer’s conduct occurs determines his liability, when that question comes up in another jurisdiction. Slater v. Mexican National Ry. Co.,
Against the possibility of a new trial, we must go further and decide whether the defendant would also be immune if it had authorized Clemens to take the ear to Ontario, but if Ms errand in this instance had still not been within the scope of Ms authority; that is, whether the Ontario law might impute his wrong to the defendant merely from sending him into the province. New York has a somewhat similar law (section 59 of the Vehicle and Traffic Act [Consol. Laws N. Y. c. 71]), but it does not impute liability regardless of restrictions on the- driver’s authority. Chaika v. Vandenberg,
This, which appears to us sound in principle, is we think the inevitable consequence of Young v. Masci,
As to its proper meaning we can express ourselves only with diffidence; anything we may say must of course be understood as subject to correction by the decision of a Canadian court. We are unhappily forced to a conclusion without any very close decision, and in the face of a conflict of opinion between two well-qualified gentlemen of the Canadian bar. The only cases which seem to us near enough to be helpful are Le Bar v. Barber & Clarke, (1923) 3 D. L. R. 1147, and Wainio v. Beaudreault, (1927) 4 D. L. R. 1131, both in the Appellate Division of the Ontario Supreme Court; each involving another section of the act whose language was however closely like the critical phrase of section 41-A. In the first the owner had left his car in “cold storage,” and the bailee took it out and used it on the highway. The owner was excused only by a vote of three to two, and it is apparent that the majority would not have exonerated him, if he had consented to the use of the ear on a highway. In the second ease the ear was given to one Bredenburg, who let another drive it, though he was in it at the time. The owner was again excused, this time on the notion that the actual driver, a woman, was not in possession with the owner’s consent. The most that the decision can be thought to hold is that the driver is the person “in possession” ; and while perhaps that gives the word a somewhat uncommon meaning, certainly it was a highly reasonable one in the context. At any rate neither ease, nor both together, are any ground for supposing that when possession has been given to the negligent driver, who has been authorized to use the ear on a highway, it makes any difference that he has exceeded the scope of his authority as understood at common law, or has gone beyond his authorized territory. Indeed, were that true, we should be at some loss to see just how the section changed the law at all. Finally we agree with the judge that the meaning of the statute is for the court, notwithstanding conflicting testimony of experts. Finney v. Guy,
There was evidence to justify setting aside the release. Clemens had told the plaintiff that she was not seriously injured, merely had a strained hack and would be about again in a short time; her doctor confirmed this though he did tell her her back was broken. These assurances were much more positive than those before the court in Chicago & N. W. Ry. v. Wilcox,
Judgment reversed; new trial ordered.
