120 Minn. 283 | Minn. | 1913
On November 14, 1910, plaintiff was driving with a horse and’ buggy on a country road. Defendant Olson, driving a team belonging to appellant, undertook to pass her from behind. He turned to-the right, instead of to the left, and in passing struck the wheel of" plaintiff’s buggy and caused her to be thrown and to sustain some-injury. Olson was in the employ of the appellant on his farm, and he had been in such employ nearly four years. This was one of the-farm teams. He testified that he took care of the horses, drove them,, and had charge of them; that he sometimes went to Minneapolis or-New Brighton for provisions for his family, and when'he did so» would drive appellant’s horses. One witness testified that he had. seen Olson a number of times drive on this same road with this same'
On this day Olson had taken to Minneapolis a load of furniture belonging to appellant, taking it from the farm to appellant’s home in Minneapolis. He testified: “It was getting late in the fall, and Carlson had ceased living there for the summer and was taking some little things to town.” He testified that he was not working for Carlson on that day, but for himself; that Carlson had not instructed him to take his furniture to town; that a teamster from Carlson’s shop, Kudolph Anderson, came out to bring a load of manure and to take this furniture in, but that Olson told him that he would take it in. “The way I came to take it in,” he said, “it was cold and the ground was wet and my kid go to school and he didn’t have no rubbers and I didn’t have no rubbers or overshoes and neither my wife.” Another witness, however, testified that Olson left with the load several hours before Anderson arrived.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against "both Olson and appellant. Appellant moved in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. Both motions were denied. Carlson alone appealed.
There was ample evidence that Olson was negligent. The only -question in the case is: Was the appellant liable for Olson’s negligence? Appellant contends that Olson was acting outside of his -employment and that he alone was liable.
The law on this subject is well settled in this state. The rule is that' the master is responsible for the torts of his servant done within the scope of his agency; that is, in the course of his employment or in the line of his duty, with a view to the "furtherance of his master’s "business, and not for a purpose personal to himself. The fact that the servant in committing the tort may have exceeded his actual
Both appellant and Olson testified that Olson was forbidden to-do teaming on the road, and that under no circumstances was he authorized to do so; but the jury was not bound to accept this testimony as true. There was ample evidence from which they might-find the facts to be otherwise.
Whether he was in fact acting within the scope of his agency was-fairly a question of fact for the jury. Olson was in appellant’s employ, and was driving appellant’s team. There was evidence that he had driven this team upon the road so frequently that the appellant’s assent to his doing so might fairly be inferred. On this day he was admittedly performing a service for appellant. He was, admittedly acting, in part at least, in furtherance of appellant’s business, and not altogether for the purposes personal to himself. His own explanation of the circumstances under which he came to perform this service is not altogether satisfactory, and is contradicted by another witness. We hold that the finding of the jury that he was within the course of his employment, and within the line of his duty, is sustained by the evidence. See Gerhardt v. Swaty, 57 Wis. 24, 37, 14 N. W. 851; Hiroux v. Baum, 137 Wis. 197, 118 N. W. 533, 19 L.R.A.(N.S.) 332.
This verdict may be sustained, even though Olson’s purpose in
Such an instrumentality is said in one case to be a “means, facility, and advantage, to which he was entitled by reason of his being an employee or servant, which entered into and became a part of his contract of employment, or were incidental and necessary to it” (Ewald v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co. supra); and in another case “a permissive privilege granted to the plaintiff, of which he availed himself, to facilitate his labors and service and is equally connected
The order appealed from is affirmed.