Boniface v. Relyea

5 Abb. Pr. 259, 36 How. Pr. 457, 6 Rob. 397
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 Abb. Pr. 259 (Boniface v. Relyea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boniface v. Relyea, 5 Abb. Pr. 259, 36 How. Pr. 457, 6 Rob. 397 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1868).

Opinion

By the Court.—Monell, J.

—The main questions in this case are presented by the denial of the motion to dismiss the complaint, on the ground that the plaintiff had furnished no evidence that the driver of the carriage was in the employment or under the control or direction ■ of the defendant.: and by the refusal to charge the jury that if the defendant was the agent of Darrow, who employed him, he was not liable. I do not think any question can properly be raised now on the evidence subsequently furnished by the defendant, that the carriage and horses were owned by the driver.

The motion to dismiss the complaint was not renewed after such evidence had Been given, nor was there any [262]*262request to direct, upon such undisputed facts, a verdict for the defendant.

The ground therefore upon which the motion to dismiss the complaint was made, coupled with the request to charge the jury, present the only questions for examination.

The evidence was that Darrow employed the defendant as undertaker, to superintend and have the whole control of the burial of his (Darrow's) deceased father. The defendant was to furnish five carriages and horses, one of which he was to send to the plaintiff, and carry her to .the cemetery and back to New York. The carriages were furnished ; and the negligent act of the driver of the one sent to the plaintiff, and in which she was returning from the cemetery, caused the injury.

There was no evidence whatever that the driver of the carriage was the servant of the defendant, and such relation could be implied only from the engagement of the latter to furnish carriages for the funeral, and furnishing them in pursuance of such engagement. And in submitting the case to the jury, they were instructed, that if they should find that the driver of the carriage was the servant of the defendant, he was liable : under which instruction the jury were allowed to determine that the relation of master and servant existed from the mere fact of the defendant’s engagement with Darrow.

By their verdict they must have wholly rejected the undisputed fact that the driver of the carriage and horses was their owner, which fact necessarily, I think, established conclusively that the relation of master and servant did not exist.

The principle of respondeat superior applies only to the immediate employer of the servant or agent through whose negligence an injury occurs. There cannot be two superiors, and the difficulty in all the cases has been in determining whose servant the person was who did the injury ; when that is determined, the principle of respondeat superior at once attaches, and renders the immediate master or employer liable.

[263]*263It appears to me to be quite clear, that if it be conceded that the driver of the horses was their owner, and was merely employed by the defendant for the service specified in his engagement with Darrow, that such employment alone would not make the driver the servant of the defendant. The mere hiring of a person is not always sufficient to create the relation of master and servant. There must be, besides the hiring, some degree of actual control over the person hired, and some right to direct him from time to time as the master may see fit; for the responsibility of the master begins and ends with his control over and his right to direct his servant, and therefore the master is held to a reasonable care and discretion in the choice of a servant.

There was nothing in the contract with the driver for the use of the carriage which created the relation of principal and agent, or of master and servant. By the contract, the driver was left in the free and independent use of his own judgment, means and skill in the execution of it; and the only power the defendant could exert, was merely such as one party to a contract may always exercise, without incurring the danger of expressly or impliedly establishing a different relation than that of simply contracting parties.

If in this case, by any just implication, the driver could be regarded as the agent or servant of the defendant, within the rule respondeat superior, then in every case of hiring a hackney-coach from a public stand, or from a livery-stable—or of a vessel to carry passengers on an excursion—or of a contract to do a specified work —the driver of the hackney or livery coach, or the officers and crew of the vessel, or the contractor, would be the servants of the employer, and the law would imply his sanction of all their acts. So that, if I hire a hackney-coach from one of the public stands to carry me to a given place, and the driver negligently injures another, I am responsible; or if I hire of the owner a vessel and crew to carry passengers on a pleasure excursion, I must insure their skill and competency, and be made liable for [264]*264an injury to a passenger through the negligence of one of the crew. I am not aware of any principle of law which sanctions such a proposition. There would be neither reason nor justice in it. The foundation of the relation of master- and servant being the right to select the servant and the right to control and direct him, the owner of the hackney-coach, or of the vessel, in the cases stated, would be the superior, and alone responsible.

The leading English case is Langher v. Pointer (5 B. & C., 547), where the owner of a carriage hired of a stable-keeper a pair of horses to draw it for the day. The stable-keeper furnished the driver, through whose negligent driving an injury was done to a horse belonging to a third person, and it was held that the owner of the carriage was not liable. And the case was not affected though the owner of the carriage selected from many the particular servant who drove the horses. The court said “ If the driver be the servant of the job-master, we do not think he ceases to be so by reason of the owner of the carriage preferring to be driven by that particular servant, any more than a hack postboy ceases to be the servant of an innkeeper, where a traveler has a preference of one over the rest on account of his sobriety and carefulness.”

And in Quanman v. Burnett (6 M. & W., 508), where the owner of a carriage hired the driver, and provided him with a livery, which he left at their house at the end of each drive, and the injury in question was occasioned by leaving his horses while so depositing the livery in their house, the court without hesitation relieved the owner from responsibility. But they said, that if the livery had been left under a general or special order to do so, without leaving any one at the horses’ heads, the owner would have been liable; for a person who is not the general master of a servant may make him his servant in a particular transaction, by specially directing him thereto, or by a subsequent adoption of what he has done.

The decision in these cases was put upon the ground that the driver could not be the servant of both the livery-[265]*265stable keeper and the person in the carriage ; as Little-dale, Justice, said, “he was the servant of one or the other, but not the servant of one and the other.”

In the case of Powles v. Hudson (36 Eng. L. R., 162), the distinctions are clearly drawn. The action was for failing to deliver baggage. The defendant was the proprietor of a cab which he let for hire to a driver, through whose negligence the baggage was lost; and Lord Campbell, Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Abb. Pr. 259, 36 How. Pr. 457, 6 Rob. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boniface-v-relyea-nysuperctnyc-1868.