Cook v. Sanger

293 P. 794, 110 Cal. App. 90, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 26, 1930
DocketDocket No. 4208.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 293 P. 794 (Cook v. Sanger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Sanger, 293 P. 794, 110 Cal. App. 90, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 104 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE PLUMMER Delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff had judgment against the defendants in the sum of $4,500 for and on account of injuries suffered by being struck and knocked down by an automobile owned by the defendant C. • E. Sanger, operated by him at a time while said Sanger was acting as an em-

*92 The accident leading to the injury of the'plaintiff occurred in the following manner: The defendant Sanger parked his automobile on Bast Fourth Street, between Los Angeles and Main Streets, on the north side of Fourth Street, about halfway up the block. Fourth Street runs east and west. There is a decided slope on East Fourth Street at the point where the automobile was parked, this slope being downhill from west to east, Los Angeles Street being lower than Main Street. The automobile was parked at about noontime. After parking the automobile, Sanger spent a few minutes in an establishment conducted by the International Electric Company. After transacting his business with the Electric Company, Sanger returned to the place where his automobile was parked, and in starting the car used a crank for that purpose. It appears that the self-starter was out of order. The crank for starting the car was in the front compartment near the gear-shift lever. Upon cranking the car it started backward, ran downhill to where the plaintiff was standing on the sidewalk near the corner of East Fourth Street and Los Angeles Street, mounted the curb and struck the plaintiff, injuring him quite severely.

Upon this appeal no question is made as to the amount of the damages awarded and, therefore, no further attention will be given thereto.

Upon this appeal it is contended, first: That the defendant Sanger was not negligent, and that the record contains no facts upon which to predicate the finding of negligence on his part; second: that the injury did not occur to the plaintiff while Sanger was within the scope of his employment as an employee of the defendant Lacy Manufacturing Company, and third: that Sanger was an independent contractor.

The record shows that for a number of years prior to the injury of the plaintiff, as herein stated, Sanger had been in the employ of the Lacy Manufacturing Company, and for a considerable period of time had been in the service of the defendant Lacy Manufacturing Company as an outside man; that is, Sanger would be sent by the Manufacturing Company to look after outside jobs or work on electric motors *93 outside the immediate establishment maintained by the Lacy Manufacturing Company.

The record also shows that it was the practice of the company to allow its employees the sum of seven cents per mile for traveling expenses, whether they used their own automobiles or traveled by other conveyances. The mileage allowance was always calculated by the shortest distance that could be traveled, irrespective of whether such route was or was not followed by the employee. The defendant Sanger owned his own automobile, and on the day of the accident was operating his own automobile, and was paid the sum of seven cents per mile for the shortest route between the respective points which he traveled on that day. The record likewise shows that some time previous to the accident resulting in injury to the plaintiff, the Lacy Manufacturing Company had had business dealings with the International Electric Company; that a certain motor belonging to the Lacy Manufacturing Company had been repaired by the International Electric Company, but did not operate satisfactorily by reason of some defect, presumably in the winding of the motor, and the defendant Sanger had been instructed by someone connected with the Lacy Manufacturing Company, entitled to give him orders, to call at the business place of the International Electric Company and ascertain what was wrong with the motor. Sanger, however, was not instructed to call at the International Electric Company on any particular day, but simply to stop there when convenient on some of his outside trips, or, as stated by him, the first time he was uptown.

The accident occurred on the twenty-third day of April, 1926. On that day Sanger was directed to go to a place called “Vernon” and there perform certain work in behalf of the Lacy Manufacturing Company. In pursuance of this order, Sanger went to Vernon, starting early in the morning, and remained several hours. On his way back he deviated from the most direct route, two or three blocks, and stopped at the business place of the International Electric Company to make inquiries concerning the motor which we have mentioned. The defendant Sanger testified that he left his car, when parked on Fourth Street, with the handbrake set and the control lever set in neutral; that when he came back to the car he took the implement for cranking *94 the motor from the front compartment of the ear immediately beside the hand-brake lever and the gear-shifting lever; that he did not notice that the hand-brake had been released, or that the shift-gear lever had been moved from neutral into reverse; that after the ear had started to back downhill, the defendant Sanger testified that he noticed for the first time that the car had been moved from the position in which he claimed to have left it.

While a number of cases have been cited where the questions involved relate to the interference with cars by third persons, whereby they have been started, and after so being started, caused injury; also cases concerning independent contractors, and also cases where an employee has departed from his employer’s business, a statement of testimony taken principally from that given by the defendant Sanger, we think will completely answer all the questions presented upon this appeal, without any extended analysis of the cases cited by the appellant.

For some ten years or more prior to the accident the defendant Sanger had been an employee of the defendant Lacy Manufacturing Company, working as an electrician, and occasionally did work outside the plant for the company, this work consisting of repairing electrical machines. He gave all his time to the Lacy Manufacturing Company, and worked for no one else. His time began at 7 o’clock in the morning and closed at 4 P. M. He was paid so much an hour for this period, regardless of where he was. A half hour was deducted for the lunch period. It is admitted that Sanger was an employee of the Lacy Manufaeur-1 ing Company on the day of the accident, and on that particular day was working for the Lacy Manufacturing-Company. The defendant Sanger received full pay for his work on the day of the accident, including the seven cents a mile allowed for traveling expenses. . For some time prior to the accident it was a custom of the Lacy Manufacturing Company that employees should use their own automobiles' on company business, for which they were paid seven cents per mile. There was no difference in the rate of mileage allowed employees whether they used their own machines or other means of transportation.

A certain motor belonging to the appellant, Lacy Manufacturing Company, had not been operating satisfactorily *95 for some time. Work for the Lacy Manufacturing Company had been done by the International Electric Company. Sanger had also worked on this motor.

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Bluebook (online)
293 P. 794, 110 Cal. App. 90, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-sanger-calctapp-1930.