Campbell v. Campbell

162 A. 879, 104 Vt. 468, 85 A.L.R. 626, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 18, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 162 A. 879 (Campbell v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Campbell, 162 A. 879, 104 Vt. 468, 85 A.L.R. 626, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 167 (Vt. 1932).

Opinion

Slack, J.

This action is to recover for personal injuries ■sustained by plaintiff in an automobile accident. She had a verdict and judgment below, and the case is here on defendant’s ■exceptions.

The plaintiff is the mother of the defendant. Both reside in the town of Barre, Vermont, but not in the same family. She *470 has other children who reside in Hartford, Connecticut. The declaration alleges, in substance, that she desired to visit the latter children, and to that end made an arrangment with defendant to take her and her husband, by automobile, to Hartford and return and for so doing agreed to pay him the expenses incident to the trip, and that she paid him twenty dollars toward such expenses before they left Barre. The undisputed evidence establishes these allegations. Both the allegations in the declaration and the proof are sufficient to support a recovery for ordinary negligence, but neither would support a recovery for gross negligence.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence,- and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendant moved for a directed verdict on the grounds, that the evidence showed that plaintiff and defendant were engaged in a joint enterprise and therefore plaintiff could not recover; that there was no evidence from which the jury could find gross negligence on his part; and that the declaration did not allege such negligence. The motion was overruled, and defendant excepted.

The first ground of the motion cannot avail defendant. To constitute a joint enterprise within the meaning of the law, the parties must have a community of interest in the object and purpose pf the undertaking, and an equal right to direct and govern the movements and conduct of each other in respect thereto. Round v. Pike, 102 Vt. 325, 148 Atl. 283; Loomis et al. v. Abelson, 101 Vt. 459, 144 Atl. 378; Landry v. Hubert, 100 Vt. 268, 137 Atl. 97; McAndrews v. Leonard, 99 Vt. 512, 134 Atl. 710. The evidence failed to show that plaintiff had the right to-direct the movements and conduct of defendant in any particular. Moreover, the evidence tended to show that she was a passenger for hire, and, if so, she was not engaged in a joint enterprise with defendant. Bancroft’s Admx. v. Cote, 90 Vt. 358, 98 Atl. 915. Furthermore, the plaintiff claims that the-doctrine of joint enterprise does not apply in actions between parties to a joint undertaking or venture. This is the first time that this question has been before this Court. In most of orneases involving the application of this doctrine, including Boyden v. Fitchburg R. R. Co. 72 Vt. 89, 47 Atl. 409, and Loomis et al. v. Abelson, supra, the action was by one of the parties to the enterprise against a third party. In Round v. *471 Pike, supra, the question of joint enterprise was not raised, and in Landry v. Hubert, supra, McAndrews v. Leonard, supra, and Robinson v. Leonard, 100 Vt. 1, 134 Atl. 706, the question was not whether the doctrine was applicable in the circumstances, but whether the evidence showed a joint enterprise, and it was held that it did not.

Among the cases from other jurisdictions that support plaintiff’s claim are Bushnell v. Bushnell, 103 Conn. 583, 131 Atl. 432, 434, 44 A. L. R. 785; Harber v. Graham, 105 N. J. Law, 213, 143 Atl. 340, 342, 61 A. L. R. 1232; Pepper v. Morrill, 24 Fed. (2nd) 320; O’Brien v. Woldson, 149 Wash. 192, 270 Pac. 304, 62 A. L. R. 436; Collins v. Anderson, 37 Wyo. 275, 260 Pac. 1089; Wilmes v. Fournier, 111 Misc. 9, 180 N. Y. S. 860, affirmed 194 App. Div. 950, 185 N. Y. S. 958; Bloom v. Leech, 120 Ohio St. 239, 166 N. E. 137.

Bushnell v. Bushnell was an action by a woman against her husband for injuries received in an automobile accident. The court there said: “However, it might have been were the plaintiff suing a third party for injuries due to his negligence in concurrence with that of her husband, here, where she was charging him directly with responsibility for injuries due to his own failure in duty, there was no place for any imputation of his want of care to her, and the sole issues were those having to do with his negligence and her own contributory negligence. The doctrine of joint enterprise was wholly inapplicable to such a situation. ’ ’ This is in line with the law laid down in Shearman & Eedfield on Negligence, Yol. I, (6th ed.) par. 65a, where it is said: “The doctrine of imputed negligence is that in certain relations there shall be visited upon the plaintiff the negligence of another concurring with that of the defendant so as to defeat the action. It is peculiar to contributory negligence and can be invoked only where the negligence of another, for which the plaintiff is responsible, besides that of the defendant, proximately contributes to the injury.”

In Harber v. Graham the court said: “Taking up the ‘common enterprise ’ point, we think the learned judge lost sight of the fact that this principle, resting as it does upon the relation of agency existing inter sese among persons engaged in a joint or common enterprise, is applicable only as regards third persons not parties in such enterprise.”

*472 Since the theory upon which the doctrine of joint enterprise rests is that the associates in the enterprise are partners, or that each is agent for the others, and since it is everywhere held that a partner is liable for his torts committed against-another partner, and that the agent is likewise liable for his torts committed against his principal, it logically follows that this doctrine does not apply in actions between the parties to a joint enterprise, and we so hold.

The other grounds of the motion are equally untenable. If plaintiff was a passenger for hire, and it could not be held as a matter of law that she was not, it was not necessary to allege or prove gross. negligence. See Act No. 78, Laws of 1929.

Respecting the arrangement between the plaintiff and defendant the court charged the jury as follows:

‘ ‘ From the evidence in this case it appears that on November 27, last, the defendant was possessed of a certain automobile ; that sometime prior to this date the plaintiff had engaged the defendant to,transport her husband and herself to Hartford to see some of their other children. It also appears that by the terms of the agreement which plaintiff made with the defendant relative to this matter, the plaintiff was to furnish to the defendant money sufficient to cover all of the expenses incident to the trip, including any expense resulting from a possible tire blow-out, as well as all other trip expenses.

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Bluebook (online)
162 A. 879, 104 Vt. 468, 85 A.L.R. 626, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-campbell-vt-1932.