37 S.E.2d 498 | N.C. | 1946
This was an action to recover damages for the burning of plaintiff's motor truck, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant's agents and employees while acting within the scope of their employment.
The plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that his motor truck with a load of poultry, on 3 December, 1942, was being driven north by his two drivers, Eller and Bauguess, and that near South Boston, Virginia, about 4:30 a.m., plaintiff's drivers saw defendant's truck stopped on the highway and extending across the highway so as to block passage entirely. Plaintiff's truck was stopped 50 or 60 feet away. One of *178 defendant's drivers came to plaintiff's truck and asked for a tow chain, and being told they had none, the man returned to defendant's truck, and tried to start the motor, without success. Then defendant's two drivers came back to plaintiff's truck, and the witness Eller described what happened as follows: "When they came back the second time they asked if they could get in the cab of the truck. We said `yes,' because it was cold. They got in and began to ask about a battery to start the tractor. I think Bauguess told them he did not have but one and that we had no light or wrenches to get a battery out of our truck. Bauguess says, `Boys, don't strike any matches.' I said, `No, don't strike matches!' They sat there a few minutes. I heard them say to Bauguess, `Let us get a battery out.' Bauguess said, `We have no light and got no wrench.' Bauguess spoke up again and said, `Don't strike matches.' The cab was closed. The window was closed and the door closed. One of the boys reached like he was going to get a cigarette. I said, `Don't strike a match. The gas tank has been leaking. The floor mat is saturated with gas.' He struck it and in place of blowing it out he threw it down and it caught on fire, the floor mat did." The two employees of defendant were sitting on the seat in plaintiff's cab with Bauguess, while Eller was lying immediately back of the seat in the "sleeper."
The witness Bauguess testified: "When the two boys came to our truck they wanted to know if they could get in the truck. They got in the cab and sat down. They wanted to know about the battery. I told them I didn't have any lights or wrenches and not to strike any matches. They sat there a minute or two. Mr. Eller said something about not striking a match. I said something two or three times and the first thing I knew one struck a match to light a cigarette and throwed it on the floor. When he did it caught. These boys jumped out of the truck. . . . It was one of the two who struck the match. We had been sitting in the cab maybe ten to fifteen minutes. We had been talking after they came down there. When these boys came and sat in our truck, the engine was running. It didn't run all the time, the entire fifteen minutes we were there. I cut it off. It was awfully cold. I like to have froze. While the boys were in the truck they were both sitting on the seat with me. One struck a match. He throwed it on the floor. When he threw it down the fire blazed up. It must have been burning when he threw it down. He didn't blow it out when he threw it down."
At the conclusion of plaintiff's evidence, defendant's motion for judgment of nonsuit was allowed, and from judgment dismissing the action, plaintiff appealed. The sole question presented is the propriety of the nonsuit.
Plaintiff's evidence tended to show that the burning of the truck was due to the action of one of defendant's employees in dropping an unextinguished match on a gasoline-saturated mat on the floor of the cab of plaintiff's truck. The match had been struck to light a cigarette. The action of defendant's employee according to this evidence was negligent and the damage to plaintiff's truck proximately resulted therefrom. But liability therefor could not be imputed to the defendant, employer, unless his employee at the time of the negligent act and in respect thereto was acting within the scope of his employment. Rogers v. Black Mountain,
Whether the defendant's employee, in the case at bar, was acting in the course of his employment at the time and with respect to the negligent act complained of must be determined by consideration of the evidence showing the circumstance of the employee's entry into and presence in the cab of plaintiff's truck at the time.
Defendant's truck was stalled on the highway, blocking traffic. It was the duty of defendant's employees to their employer to use all reasonable effort to move the truck. They attempted to secure from plaintiff's truck a tow chain, without success. The effort to start the motor also proved unsuccessful. It was midwinter and quite cold, 4:30 a.m. Under these circumstances defendant's employees went to plaintiff's truck, climbed in the cab and sat down on the seat and inquired about a battery to start the motor on defendant's truck. They were told by plaintiff's drivers they did not have one, and that they had no lights and wrenches to disconnect the battery on their truck. Defendant's employees continued to sit there for some minutes engaged in conversation — one witness said fifteen *180 minutes. At length one of defendant's employees pulled out a cigarette to indulge in a smoke. Both Eller and Bauguess warned him not to strike a match, but he did so, and negligently threw the unextinguished match on the floor. The gasoline fumes caught fire and consumed plaintiff's truck.
It will be observed that the negligent act complained of was the throwing by defendant's employee of a lighted match on the gasoline-saturated mat in plaintiff's cab. The match had been struck to light a cigarette for the personal use of defendant's employee. The tortious act was not committed on premises, nor by the use of an instrumentality over which defendant had any control. Thus, where the driver of a taxicab became intoxicated and injured a third person the employer was held liable though the drinking was for the employee's individual purposes, since he was using the employer's vehicle apparently in the course of his employment. Crowell v. Duncan,
The plaintiff relies on the case of Jefferson v. Derbyshire Farmers,supra, as an authority in support of his position. In that case the defendants were using a garage for servicing their trucks, and employed a young man named Booth to work in and about the garage. While Booth was emptying a drum of motor spirit, or benzol, into tins, he struck a match to light a cigarette and threw the match on the floor, causing a destructive fire. The Court held the defendant's employers liable on the ground that it was within the scope of Booth's employment to empty motor spirit drums in the garage, and that it was his duty to do this work with reasonable care. To smoke and throw a lighted match on the floor while doing this work was thought to be a negligent act in the performance of the work he was employed to do. In a concurring opinion it was suggested that the law cast a duty on the user of the garage to take reasonable care that no damage be occasioned by the use thereof by him or his servants; that the pouring of motor spirit involved danger, requiring special precautions, and that the act which caused damage was done while engaged in this dangerous operation. The epitome *181 of the decision is that recovery was permitted on the ground that the servant was doing the act he was employed to do, negligently.
It may be noted that the annotator of that case in 13 A.L.R., 1000, adds this criticism: "In order to justify this reasoning, the act of the servant in drawing the benzol in the presence of fire, rather than his act in throwing down a lighted match, must be regarded as the proximate cause of the injury."
In Williams v. Jones, 3 Hurlst C., 256, 159 Eng. Reprint, 528, 13 A.L.R., 997, a carpenter was at work for his employer making a signboard in a shed where there were shavings. While the employee was so engaged, for the purpose of lighting his pipe, he kindled a shaving at a match and negligently dropped the burning shaving on the floor, causing fire and damage to the building. The employer was sued, but recovery was denied. It was said the master could only be held liable if the servant was negligent in using the shed for the purposes of the master and in the course of his employment; that the act of lighting the pipe was in no way for the benefit of the master nor in the furtherance of the object of his employment; that he was employed to use the shed only for the purpose of making a signboard, and when he used it for other purposes and those purposes exclusively his own, he became an independent wrongdoer. The decision rests on the ground that there was no connection between the lighting of a pipe to smoke and the making of a signboard. A dissenting opinion in that case was based on the view that the master being in control of the shed should be held liable for negligent use of it by his servant. This case was distinguished inJefferson v. Derbyshire Farmers, supra. In another English case, Heard v.Flaungan, 10 Vict. L.R. (1), 1, the employee set fire to hay by putting a lighted pipe together with some matches in the pocket of his waistcoat while it was lying against the stack. The heat of the pipe ignited the matches and caused the fire. Recovery was denied.
The decisions of the American courts where this question has been considered are generally in support of the view that the act of striking a match to light a cigarette under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence in this case may not be considered as having been done in the course of the employment of the employee so as to impose liability on the employer for injury thereby occasioned under the doctrine of respondeatsuperior. As this question has not heretofore been considered by this Court, we cite a number of cases from other jurisdictions.
In Shuck v. Carney,
In Kelly v. Oil Ref. Co.,
In Herr v. Simplex Paper Box Corp.,
In Adams v. Telephone Co., 295 F., 586, a repairman was sent to plaintiff's home to repair a telephone and while there emptied his pipe over the porch railing, causing damage from fire. It was held that the act of the employee, merely to serve his own pleasure or purpose, had no connection with the duties of his employment and recovery was denied.
In Feeney v. Standard Oil Co.,
In Palmer v. Keen Forestry Asso.,
In Maloney Tank Mfg. Co. v. Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.,
These cases would seem to rest not on the principle of respondeatsuperior, but on want of due care on the part of the employer as owner of the premises or instrumentality involved under circumstances importing danger. Annotation 31 A.L.R., 294.
We think the rule applicable to the facts disclosed in the case at bar is aptly stated in Restatement Law of Agency, sec. 235, as follows: "An act of the servant is not within the scope of employment if it is done with no intention to perform it as a part of or incident to a service on account of which he is employed."
For the reasons stated we conclude that the court below has correctly ruled, and the judgment is
Affirmed. *184