Cohen v. Fayette

233 Ill. App. 458, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 212
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 9, 1924
DocketGen. No. 28,649
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 233 Ill. App. 458 (Cohen v. Fayette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohen v. Fayette, 233 Ill. App. 458, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 212 (Ill. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Fitch

delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ of error is brought to reverse a judgment for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff when he was struck by an automobile delivery truck belonging to defendant. The three counts of the declaration on which the case was tried charge that the accident happened through the negligence of defendant’s servant in charge of the automobile. With his plea of not guilty, the defendant filed special pleas alleging that at the time of the accident the man in charge of the automobile was not engaged in defendant’s business, but was engaged on business of his own, outside of the scope of any authority given him by the defendant.

No question of negligence is discussed in the brief of defendant’s counsel. For the purposes of this writ of error, it is apparently admitted — or at least, not denied — that the automobile in question belonged to the defendant and at the time of the accident was being driven by an employee of defendant, that such driver was negligent as charged in the declaration, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the accident and injury to the plaintiff. The main contention of defendant’s counsel is that the evidence does not show, by the necessary preponderance, that the acts of negligence complained of occurred while such driver was acting in the course and within the scope of his employment, but does show affirmatively that, at the time of the accident, the driver was engaged in pursuing purposes of his own outside of the scope of his employment, and therefore the defendant cannot be held liable on the theory of respondeat superior.

The defendant was engaged in selling candies on commission. He had no place of business other than his residence on Leland Avenue, Chicago. He owned a half-ton automobile delivery truck which he kept in a garage on Clark Street near Leland Avenue. The truck was used to make deliveries to customers of the candies he sold, and defendant employed a young man named Auer to drive it. The driver’s hours of work were from eight o’clock in the morning- until six in the evening. The accident happened on May 28, 1920, at half past seven o’clock in the evening. Auer, who lived on Ridge Avenue near Victoria Street, was driving defendant’s empty truck west on Victoria Street and was approaching Clark Street, at a rate of speed variously estimated by the witnesses at from 15 to 40 miles an hour, when the plaintiff, a boy 10 years old, who had been playing on the sidewalk, ran into the street in front of the automobile and was injured. The defendant was not in the car at the time and had no personal knowledge of the facts regarding the accident.

An investigator, called by the plaintiff, testified that about 3 weeks after the accident he interviewed the defendant; that defendant then admitted that he owned the car, and that his employee, Auer, was driving it; that defendant also said that Auer “had been out on the north side some place” delivering a load of merchandise and that “on his way back to the garage in the car he stopped at his home, as he did sometimes, sometimes changed his clothes, sometimes to get something to eat;” that “Victoria street was the shortest way to the garage” from Auer’s home on Ridge Avenue, and that Auer “frequently came up that way to go to the garage.” These alleged verbal admissions of the defendant constitute the only evidence offered by the plaintiff on the issue raised by the special pleas.

The defendant testified that when he hired Auer some two years before the accident, he told Auer that “he was"not allowed to use the truck after six o’clock in the evening for any purpose whatever,” and that during such two years Auer was always back in the garage at six o’clock at night, with one exception, and that was in December; that “his work was laid out so that he would be back in the garage at six o’clock every night”; that he, the defendant, had never given Auer permission to take the truck to his home, “to change his clothes, or to get meals, or anything of that sort”; and that Auer’s route was “up north into the suburbs” from Evanston to Fort Sheridan. This testimony of the defendant was fully corroborated by Auer, who testified further that on the day of the accident he had been making deliveries “somewhere in the suburbs” and had “got back to the north side near Mr. Fayette’s place of business, or where he kept his car,” at five o’clock; that he then found he had no further work to do that day for the defendant, whereupon, instead of putting the car in the garage, he drove the car to his home “to eat”; that he did this "without the permission and contrary to the general instructions of the defendant; that he remained at home over an hour and then, “around seven o’clock,” he started back to the garage, going “up Ridge avenue to Victoria, and Victoria to Clark, where the accident occurred.”

Upon the question of fact involved in defendant’s contention, plaintiff’s counsel argue that the testimony of plaintiff’s investigator shows that defendant loiew that Auer was in the habit of stopping at his home on his way back from the north shore suburbs “to eat his dinner or to change his clothes, and then take the car on to the garage after dinner,” and that, therefore, defendant impliedly consented to such use of the car by Auer. There is no testimony in the record, other than that of the investigator above stated, that Auer had any such habit or custom, and while the record does not show that defendant specifically denied that he told the investigator that Auer sometimes stopped at his house for dinner or to change his clothing, it does show that defendant testified that, in fact, he never allowed or permitted Auer to do so, and. that during the whole time of Auer’s employment, Auer had never been out with the truck after six o’clock but once, and that was not the time of the accident. Furthermore, no witness disputes the testimony of Auer that on the day in question he did not stop “on his way home” to get his dinner, but that after he had finished making his deliveries for that day, he returned to defendant’s place of business (which was near the garage) more than 2 hours before the accident happened, and then, instead of putting up the car, he took it, without permission and contrary to defendant’s instructions, to his home for his evening meal, and after eating his dinner, he “was on his way back to the garage” — not from his work, but from his home — when the accident occurred. We think no jury would be justified in finding from this evidence that defendant impliedly authorized Auer to use the car as it was being used at the time of the accident, or impliedly consented to such use. (Steffen v. McNaughton, 142 Wis. 49; Lots v. Hanlon, 217 Pa. 339.)

Upon the question of law involved in defendant’s contention, the rule is well settled that where an employer is sought to be held liable for the consequences of the negligence of his employee, and the employer denies that the relation of master and servant existed at the time of the accident, the plaintiff must show by a preponderance of the evidence not only that the person at fault was employed by the defendant, but that the injury was inflicted while the servant was engaged in the master’s business and was acting within the scope of his employment. “Outside of the scope of his employment the servant is as much a stranger to his master as any third person, and an act of the servant not done in the execution of services for which he was engaged cannot be regarded as the act of the master.

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Bluebook (online)
233 Ill. App. 458, 1924 Ill. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-fayette-illappct-1924.