Caldwell v. Adams

367 S.W.2d 804, 51 Tenn. App. 373, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 30, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 367 S.W.2d 804 (Caldwell v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. Adams, 367 S.W.2d 804, 51 Tenn. App. 373, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

CHATTIN, J.

These cases arose out of a collision between a service truck owned and registered in' the name of the defendant, Adwell Motors, Inc., and driven by the defendant, Charles Caldwell, an employee of the Motor Company, and an automobile owned by the plaintiff, J. E. Adams, Sr., and driven by the plaintiff, J. E. Adams, Jr., the minor son of J. E. Adams, Sr. The *375 collision occurred about midnight on July 29, 1960, in the town of Columbia, Tennessee.

The plaintiff, J. E. Adams, Sr., sued for property damages and also for medical expenses and loss of services of his minor son. The plaintiff, J. E. Adams, Jr., sued for personal injuries.

The two cases were consolidated for trial.

The defendant, Adwell Motors, Inc., at the conclusion of all the evidence in the cases, moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor on the grounds the defendant, Caldwell, was not acting in the course or within the scope of his employment with the defendant, Motor Company, and contrary to instructions of his employer, and that at the time of the accident he was upon a mission of his own. The court overruled the motion.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of both plaintiffs and against both defendants.

The defendant, Charles Caldwell, has not appealed from the judgment. The defendant, Adwell Motors, Inc., has appealed in error to this Court and has assigned three assignments of error.

It is admitted by the defendant in its brief the negligence of Caldwell was the proximate cause of the accident.

Caldwell, at the time of the accident, was an employee of the Adwell Motors, Inc., and had been for three and one-half years prior thereto.

Adwell Motors, Inc., had furnished Caldwell transportation to and from his work when he was first employed by the Motor Company and did so for about two or three *376 years. During that time Caldwell lived outside the city limits of Columbia. He then moved into the city and Mr. Adwell told Caldwell not to use the service truck without permission. This occurred about a year prior to the accident. However, Caldwell testified he had taken the truck on about four different occasions to go home in without permission but on each occasion he would either tell Mr. Craige, the general manager of the garage, or Mr. Adwell, President of the Company, and neither had reprimanded him for so doing. Both Adwell and Craige denied Caldwell had told them he had used the truck without permission.

On the night of the accident, Mr. Adwell was on vacation and Mr. Craige was not at the garage when Caldwell took the truck. Caldwell testified he thought it would be all right to take the truck to see if it still missed.

On the evening of the accident, Caldwell had adjusted the carburetor and the points on the service truck. He had then driven the truck to his home during the supper hour and the truck seemed to operate satisfactorily. After his meal, he returned to the garage and worked until ten o’clock P.M. He told a fellow employee, T. N. Flanigan, he was going to take the truck out the Santa Fe Pike and see if it missed. He left the garage in the truck alone and drove it some distance out the pike and turned around. On his way back toward Columbia, he stopped at the Bel-Air Cafe on the Santa Fe Pike where he stayed some two hours drinking beer.

He left the cafe about midnight and was on his way home in Columbia when the accident occurred. Plaintiff, J. E. Adams, Jr., and his witnesses, Ewell Goodwin, Joe Howard Allen, and George Sieves, all testified they saw *377 Caldwell immediately after the accident and he was intoxicated. Mr. Goodwin further testified he was following the truck prior to the accident and it was weaving from one side- of the highway to the other.

Rieves and Allen were City Patrolmen and they placed Caldwell under arrest for driving while under the influence of an intoxicant. Later, Caldwell pleaded guilty to the charge in the city court of Columbia and paid a fine.

It should be noted here that both plaintiffs in their declarations charged Caldwell with driving the truck at the time of the accident while under the influence of an intoxicant.

We will consider defendant’s first and second assignments of error together as they present the same question.

Defendant’s first assignment of error is to the effect the trial court erred in overuling its motion for a directed verdict upon the grounds heretofore set out. Defendant’s second assignment of error is, there is no material evidence to support the verdict against the defendant Ad-well Motors, Inc.

We are of the opinion from the foregoing recital of the undisputed facts in the case, the defendant, Caldwell, deviated from his master’s business when he entered the Bel-Air Cafe and remained for some two hours drinking beer and becoming intoxicated. '

‘ ‘ The general rule is that the owner of a motor vehicle is not liable under respondeat superior for the acts of another who is driving it, unless it is being used on .the business of the owner; and likewise when initially it was *378 being used on the business of the owner, but at the time of the accident the servant or agent has turned aside from or abandoned the affairs of the owner and is using it entirely for his own business or pleasure. ’ ’ Fitzgerald v. Wood, 34 Tenn.App. 345, 238 S.W.(2d) 103; 60 C.J.S. Motor Vehicles sec. 437, page 1093.

“While a mere disregard of instructions or deviation from the line of his duty by a servant does not relieve his master of responsibility, if the servant, for purposes of his own, departs so far from the line of his duty that for the time being his acts constitute an abandonment of his service, the master is not liable.

“In cases where the deviation is slight and not unusual, the court may, and often will, as a matter of law, determine the servant was still executing’ his master’s business. So too, where the deviation is very marked and unusual, the court in like manner may determine that the servant was not on the master’s business at all, but on his own. Cases falling between these extremities will be regarded as involving merely a question of fact to be left to the jury.” 5A Am.Jur., Section 636, page 630-631.

“In 1834 Baron Parke uttered the classic phrase, that a master is not liable for the torts of his servant who is not at all on his master’s business, but is 'going on a frolic of his own.’ If the servant steps outside of his employment to do some act for himself, not connected with the master’s business, there is no more responsibility for what he does than for the acts of any stranger. If he has no intention, at least in part, to perform any service for the employer, but only to further a personal *379 end, Ms act is not witMn the scope of the employment. ’ ’ Prosser on Torts, page 352.

In Cunningham v. Union Chevrolet Company, 177 Tenn.

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367 S.W.2d 804, 51 Tenn. App. 373, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-adams-tennctapp-1962.