49 F.2d 533 | D.C. Cir. | 1931
This action was originally brought in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia by Delia Flaherty, appellee, whom we shall hereafter call plaintiff, against Wardman Park Taxicab Company, Inc.,' appellant, whom we shall hereafter call defendant, and was to recover from the defendant damages for personal injuries done to the plaintiff, by carelessly and negligently driving a taxicab against her when crossing a street in the city of Washington.
The declaration alleges that the driver of the taxicab was the defendant’s servant, and
Defendant was the operator of taxicabs in the city of Washington, and had two exclusive concessions or stands, one located at Wardman Park Hotel and the other at Chastleton Apartment Hotel. Its drivers were instructed that, when three of its cabs drew up to the Chastleton stand, the cab at the head of the line should pull off and proceed to the other stand. When a cab was dismissed by a passenger, its duty was to report to the Wardman Park stand for directions, and, while in transit from one point to another, the driver was at liberty and expected to take on a passenger if hailed for that purpose. When not carrying passengers, the driver was expected to be on,one or the other stand. There was no regular place fixed for the drivers to get their meals during working hours, but they were warned to use as little mileage as possible for that purpose, and not to go out of their way to eat.'
On the evening in question, the driver of the taxicab involved had taken a passenger from the Chastleton Hotel to the Wyoming Apartments, and had then gone back to the Chastleton again. About 9 o’clock, while he was in line at the Chastleton, two other taxis of the defendant came up, and this required him to move. The driver, who had invited a female friend to meet him at the Chastleton that evening, -and who had done so, thereupon invited her to get into the cab and go with him while he had his supper, and promised then to drive her home. He paid the company nothing for her transportation. The accident occurred after he had gotten his supper and was driving his woman companion to her home, which was several blocks out of his regular course.
The first question for determination is whether the action of the driver of the taxicab in departing from his line of duty in his employer’s business exempted the employer from liability for his negligence. There is, of course, no controversy here as to the rule that the master is liable for the negligence of the servant while the latter is acting in the master’s business and within the scope of the employment, and equally is it admittedly true that such liability exists even in those cases in which the servant’s negligent aet is contrary to the master’s instructions. In the latter case — where the servant is disobeying the master’s orders and as a result injures a stranger — the question ordinarily is whether the servant was at the time acting within the course of his employment, that is to say, whether at the time of the injury the relation of master and servant obtained. Many eases may be cited to the effect that the servant’s disregard of the master’s orders, even though the disregard be impelled by some purpose personal to the servant, does not change the ordinary rule, or, in the event of injury to a third person as a result thereof, exempt the master from liability. Quinn v. Power, 87 N. Y. 535, 41 Am. Rep. 392; Kneff v. Sanford, 63 Wash. 503, 115 P. 1040. On the other hand, it is undoubtedly true that it has been frequently held in many of the state courts that, since the liability of the master in such circumstances grows out of the maxim qui facit per alium faeit per se, the master is not liable if the tortious act of the servant occurs during a severance of the relationship, notwithstanding he may then be using his master’s property. ■
This rule, as applied to cases of the wrongful use by the servant of his master’s automobile, is well expressed in 2 R. C. L. page 1198, as follows: “The owner of an automobile is not liable to one who is injured by the negligence of his ehauifeur while operating the machine without his knowledge or permission and for a purpose other than that for which he was employed, as where the driver is on an errand personal to himself, or is making a detour for his own purpose.” Following this rule, it has been held that, where the servant steps outside of his employment to do an act for himself not connected with his master’s business, no liability attaches. Tyler v. Stephan’s Adm’x, 163 Ky. 773, 174 S. W. 790. And so here we are asked to hold in effect that defendant cannot be held liable because the driver of his cab was at the time of the injury to plaintiff using the same in violation of the master’s rule, and this too, notwithstanding it is not contested he was then in the master’s employ and rightfully in possession of the cab. This we think is not and should not be the law. We cannot shut our eyes to the fact that an automobile, in the crowded conditions of street traffic as it exists today iii large cities, is, as was declared by Mr. Justice Sutherland in the recent case of District of Columbia v. Colts, 282 U. S. 63, 51 S. Ct.
In these circumstances, it seems to us the duty of the courts to indulge no subtle reasoning in extending the doetrine of nonliability to the owner of such an instrumentality who, in his search of gain and profit, places one of these in irresponsible hands, but rather to require of him such supervision of his servant as will avoid disobedience to and disregard of his rules, or, failing so to do, when injury occurs to a stranger, to shoulder the responsibility. Hence we are of opinion that whatever may be the rule in the case of a private chauffeur who, in violation of his master’s orders, takes his private automobile and uses it without the master’s knowledge and for the servant’s purposes alone, or, in the ease of one intrusted for the moment by its owner with an automobile for a specific purpose who, in disregard of that purpose, uses it for another, the rule in the ease of one who, as a carrier of passengers for hire, places an automobile in the hands of a servant for the purpose of soliciting and obtaining fares and transporting them from one part of the city to another, and who, in such circumstances, admittedly would be liable to a pedestrian negligently injured by the servant, should reasonably be held to include liability for an injury inflicted by the negligence of the servant where that servant, in violation of the master’s rules, is, as was here the case, transporting free a friend to her home near by. There is, we think, nothing novel in such a rule. Precisely the same proposition was many years ago announced by the Supreme Court in an action against a railroad company in a ease in which an injury was caused through the negligence of an employee in disregard of the general orders or special command of the employer. Philadelphia & Reading R. Co. v. Derby, 14 How. 468, 487, 14 L. Ed. 502. In that case, Mr. Justice Grier, speaking for the court, used this striking language: “Nothing but the most stringent enforcement of discipline, and the most exact and perfect obedience to every rule and order emanating from a superior, can insure safety to life and property. The intrusting such a powerful and dangerous engine as a locomotive, to one who will not submit to control, and render implicit obedience to orders, is itself an act of negligence, the ‘causa eausans’ of the mischief; while the proximate cause, or the ipsa negligentia which produces it, may truly be said, in most cases, to be the disobedience •of orders by the servant so intrusted. If such disobedience could be set up by a railroad company as a defence, when charged with negligence, the remedy of the injured party would in most cases he illusive, discipline would be relaxed, and the danger to the life and limb of the traveler greatly enhanced. Any relaxation of the stringent policy and principles of the law affecting such cases, would be highly detrimental to public safety.”
In the case under consideration, defendant plaeed its taxicab in the hands and under the control of its driver. It instructed him as to his duties, and these instructions included a prohibition of his use of the cab except in transporting passengers for pay in accordance with its established tariff. The injury here' complained of occurred because the driver, in disobedience of defendant’s rules, was transporting a passenger — a friend —free of charge, and doubtless, except for this disobedience, the injury would not have happened. But, as we think, having intrusted the cab to the driver, it is not enough that the servant disobeyed the master’s instructions, nor do we think such disobedience — • not amounting to an obvious or complete abandonment of the service (Kruse v. White Bros., 81 Cal. App. 86, 253 P. 178) — ipso facto destroys the relationship of master and servant, or makes inapplicable the rule of respondeat superior, but that for injury thus sustained the master should respond, and on the ground that the master’s act in putting it in the servant’s power, through the use of the car, to do the damage, creates the liability, notwithstanding it would not have occurred except for the servant’s disobedience of the rule. Phila. & R. R. Co. v. Derby, 14 How. 468, 14 L. Ed. 502; Sleath v. Wilson, 9 Car. & P. 607.
To the extent that what is said above may be in conflict with Lucas v. Friedman, 58 App. D. C. 5, 24 F.(2d) 271, the latter case may be considered as overruled.
It is next insisted that binding instructions should also have been given because plaintiff’s own evidence establishes that she was negligent in failing to look as she crossed • the street and in failing to use due care for her own safety. The evidence shows that she left her brother’s house on Twentieth street to go home, proceeding south on the
Defendant’s final ground of error, namely, that the court erred in permitting the witness Chichester to testify to the speed of the cab at the time of the injury, was not pressed in the argument, and we think properly so, because the record shows that the objection to this evidence was sustained by the trial court, and no error in this respeet could or should have been assigned.
Affirmed.