ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
The Stockers' petition for rehearing, claiming that in our opinion of September 30, 1985, Stocker v. Cataldi,
We write to clarify our rationale for affirming the trial court's grant of Mrs. Ca-taldi's motion for summary judgment.
The law in Indiana requires that the owner of an automobile will be lable for the negligent acts of one to whom the automobile has been entrusted only if the owner knows at the time of entrustment that the driver is incompetent to drive safely. Fisher v. Fletcher (1922)
In Fisher, supra the plaintiff alleged that the owner knew the driver "was in the habit of drinking intoxicating liquors to excess," and in the habit of using the owner's automobile while intoxicated; that the driver was a "wild and reckless driver of ... said automobile" and that the driver "had been arrested, convicted, and fined for driving said automobile in such manner...." Id.,
In a similar case, Ellsworth v. Ludwig, supra, the Court of Appeals relied upon Fisher in holding that the owner must have actual and immediate knowledge of the driver's unfitness to drive when the vehicle is entrusted. The court also held that it was error to admit evidence that the driver's license had been suspended for driving while intoxicated and that several later criminal convictions occurred while he drove without a license. The court held that evidence which reveals that the owner could have known or should have known of the driver's unfitness to drive is not sufficient under present law to impose liability. Ellsworth v. Ludwig, supra,
In each of the cases above it was not enough that the owner of the vehicle knew the driver was irresponsible or even reckless, the owner would had to have known that the driver was unfit at the time of entrustment. The evidence in the case at bar does not show that Mrs. Cataldi knew, when she entrusted her car to Michael, that he was unfit in the sense of being incapacitated or incapable of exercising due care. If a higher standard of care is to be imposed upon the owner of a car charged with negligently entrusting it to another, it is for the Supreme Court and not this court to announce such a change.
Petition for Rehearing Denied.
Petition for rehearing by R.J. Cataldi is also denied.
