45 A.2d 59 | Pa. | 1945
Lead Opinion
Mr. Justice PATTERSON filed a concurring opinion. *410
Argued September 26, 1945. On November 1, 1943, Naomi Irene Siidekum was killed when an automobile in which she was a passenger and which was being driven by Harvey E. Domhoff came into collision with a truck belonging to the Animal Rescue League of Pittsburgh and operated by James V. Jackson, a policeman of the City of Pittsburgh. Suit was brought against the City, the League and Jackson *411 by Fred H. Siidekum, as administrator c. t. a., on behalf of decedent's estate and of those entitled to recover for her wrongful death; the League brought in Domhoff as additional defendant. The trial resulted in a verdict against the three defendants in the sum of $955 for the estate and $25,000, subsequently reduced by the court to $12,000, for the husband, he being the person entitled to the recovery under the "death" acts; a verdict was also returned in favor of the additional defendant. The court upheld the verdicts against the City and against Jackson but granted judgment n. o. v. in favor of the Animal Rescue League.
That the accident was due solely to the negligence of Jackson is now admitted by all parties; the question is whether, in operating the truck at the time of the accident, he was acting as an employe of the City, of the League, or of both. A further controversy arises from the fact that the League successfully claimed immunity from liability on the ground of its being a charitable organization. There is also a complaint by defendants as to the alleged excessiveness of the verdict recovered on behalf of decedent's husband.
By the Dog Law of 1921, P. L. 522, § 19 (amended by the Act of 1935, P. L. 219) it was made the duty of every municipal police officer to seize and detain any dog found running at large and unaccompanied by its owner or keeper. The seizure of stray dogs, as a function of the government of the City of Pittsburgh, is under the charge of the Director of the Department of Public Safety.
The Animal Rescue League is an organization formed for the purpose of sheltering neglected dogs, cats and horses, restoring them to their owners or otherwise providing for them, and preventing them from being cruelly treated. In order to carry out its operations it owns appropriate equipment, including trucks with specially built bodies containing individual cages; it also conducts *412 a farm on which it maintains boarding kennels, and it employs the services of veterinaries to administer to diseased and injured animals.
Because of the common objective of the City and the League in the seizure and proper disposition of stray dogs, and because of the facilities possessed by the League for that purpose, the City has, over a long course of years, entered annually into contracts with the League whereby, for the sum (in the 1943 contract) of $1,000 per month, the League assumed the duty, "under the supervision of the Director of the Department of Public Safety, to have the City streets properly patrolled; to arrest dogs found running at large in accordance with the Dog Law of the State of Pennsylvania, and to maintain necessary property and equipment as hereinafter specified." The league agreed to maintain a detention station with kennels, to operate a fleet of four or more trucks, and to "furnish with each a driver, who shall be an official dog catcher and canvasser". It was provided that "The Police Officers assigned to the Contractor shall assist and coöperate with him [sic] in all phases of the work; shall assist the drivers and canvassers in the work of catching, collecting and impounding dogs, and shall drive the trucks when the drivers are engaged in other duties."
Under these contracts it was customary for the City to assign four police officers for full-time service with the League. Jackson was among those so assigned; there was testimony to the effect that the League opposed his selection on the ground that he was addicted to drink. Due to the scarcity of labor in 1943 the League was without sufficient employes of its own to operate its trucks and Jackson drove more or less constantly during that year. On the day of the accident there was only one qualified driver on hand, so that three of the four policemen assigned by the City were engaged in operating the trucks. An emergency call came in to pick up a stray *413 dog that had been injured; Jackson drove the truck that went out on this errand, being accompanied by a young lad who was an employe of the League but not a licensed driver; it was on the way back, with the dog in the truck, that the accident happened.
Was Jackson, in driving, acting as the employe of the City of Pittsburgh,1 of the Animal Rescue League, or of both? The learned trial judge left it to the jury to determine this question, and they found that both were liable. As to what constitutes the relationship of employer and employe, and as to the status of a "loaned" employe, the law leaves little room for doubt. By a continuous stream of authorities2 it has been declared that where one person lends his servant to another for a special employment the test is whether, in the particular *414 service which he is engaged to perform, he continues liable to the direction and control of his general master or becomes subject to that of the party to whom he is lent or hired; the criterion is not whether the borrowing employer in fact exercises control but whether he has the right to exercise it. It is also well recognized that under some circumstances both the lender and the borrower may have control over the servant so as to render each of them liable for his conduct, for he may have been transferred to carry on work which is of mutual interest to them and to effect their common purpose, so that his service to the one does not involve abandonment of his service to the other.3 It is further established that, when different inferences can reasonably be drawn from the testimony as to whether the lender or the borrower is the controlling master at the time of the accident, or whether both of them have the right of control, the question is one for the jury.4
In the present case the jury found, from what we regard as amply sufficient evidence, that when Jackson was driving the truck at the time of the accident he was acting on behalf of both the City of Pittsburgh and the Animal Rescue League, and that therefore, as far as this phase of the litigation is concerned, both these defendants were liable for the death caused by his negligence. The seizure and detention of stray dogs was the objective of both the City and the League, the one in pursuance of its statutory duty, the other of its chartered purpose. *415 It was essentially a common enterprise; by the terms of the contract the police officers assigned by the City were to assist and coöperate with the League "in all phases of the work"; they were to drive the trucks when the drivers were engaged in other duties. The City did not "lend" Jackson for the performance of work which was of interest only to the League as a "borrowing" employer and in which the City itself had no concern. Jackson was not chosen, selected, or requested by the League; on the contrary, it had opposed his assignment. As a police officer, whether engaged in driving the truck or otherwise, he remained on the payroll, in the service, and under the control, of the City as his employer; driving the truck was merely incidental and necessary to the work of capturing stray dogs which was his statutory duty and the ultimate object for which he was assigned to the work. If the City did not in fact attempt to exercise control over his actions it had the power to do so, and it is the power of control which is the determining factor. On the other hand, in driving the truck he was engaged also in the service of the League; he was operating one of its trucks on its own business and was under the immediate direction of its superintendent. The verdict of the jury, therefore, was consistent with, and sustained by, the circumstances of the case, and even if the question were to be regarded as one of law depending solely upon the construction of the contract between the parties the same conclusion would necessarily follow.
This brings us to the inquiry whether the court was right in exempting the Animal Rescue League from liability because of its being a charitable organization. Whether a purely public charity should be held legally responsible for the negligence of its servants is a question that has given rise to an astounding diversity of opinion. Justice RUTLEDGE, then of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, now a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, said in President and Directors of Georgetown College v. Hughes, *416
Plaintiff apparently admits, as he must, that the Animal Rescue League, as a non-profit organization engaged *417
in the humane undertaking of caring for animals, all of its capital funds and income being used for that purpose, is a purely public charity. Its status as such has been established by judicial decision (Ammon's Estate, 72 P. L. J. 872) and by rulings of governmental agencies. Plaintiff contends, however, that, because it entered into a contract under which it is being compensated by the City in an amount constituting more than one half of its total income, and because the accident occurred in the course of operations under that contract, it was, pro hac vice, engaged in a commercial and not a charitable enterprise. The fact that a charitable organization charges for some of the work performed by it for persons able to pay does not militate against its status as a charity; many charities derive income from compensation for their services. Of course, if, as in Winnemore v. Philadelphia,
Complaint is made by the City of Pittsburgh in regard to the amount of the verdicts, but we cannot say that, as reduced by the court, they are excessive (see Filer v. Filer,
Judgments affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with the conclusion of the majority that, under the facts of this case, the Animal Rescue League should not be liable for damages for the sole reason that at the time of the accident it was engaged in carrying out its charitable purpose, to wit, care of injured animals. Distinction must be made between performance of an act by a charity in furtherance of the charitable purposes for which it was formed, and performance of an act which is the legal obligation of another but which the charity has contracted to perform. In the former, the rule of immunity applies; in the latter, it does not. It cannot properly be said that performance of the legal duties of another by a charity, pursuant to contract, renders such performance a charitable act. It is not enough that the act performed is "directly related to the purpose for which the charity was organized." The act performed or being performed must be a charitable one. Seizure of stray dogs cannot be said to be a charitable act; picking up and administering to an injured animal is.
I would base the decision of non-liability solely on the fact that at the time the accident occurred the League was engaged, not merely in performing its contractual duties, but, in the charitable act of taking an injured dog to its premises for medical treatment and care. *420