Dymond Cab Co., Inc. v. Branson

1942 OK 403, 131 P.2d 1007, 191 Okla. 604, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 1, 1942
DocketNo. 30674.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1942 OK 403 (Dymond Cab Co., Inc. v. Branson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dymond Cab Co., Inc. v. Branson, 1942 OK 403, 131 P.2d 1007, 191 Okla. 604, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 299 (Okla. 1942).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

This action was instituted in the district court of Cleveland county by W. R. Branson, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, against the Dymond Cab Company, Ewing Gafford, and the Casualty Reciprocal Exchange, hereinafter referred to as defendants, to recover damages resulting from the collision of a truck owned and operated by plaintiff with an automobile owned by the defendant cab company and operated by Ewing Gafford. Issues were joined, the cause was tried to a jury, and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff fixing the amount of recovery in the sum of $2,126 for personal injuries and the sum of $799.12 for damages to his truck. From a judgment on the verdict the defendants Dymond Cab Company and Casualty Reciprocal Exchange have appealed to this court.

Defendant Dymond Cab Company operates a taxicab business in the city of Norman. The Casualty Reciprocal Exchange is the insurance carrier of said cab company, having executed its policy in compliance with the requirements of the city ordinance. Defendant Ewing Gafford was a student in the University of Oklahoma at Norman. On May 26, 1940, defendant cab company rented one of its cabs to the said Gafford and another student under a rental agreement whereby the vehicle was to be operated by defendant Gafford as a conveyance for himself. It appears that while returning from Oklahoma City and at a point approximately eight miles north of the city of Norman, the vehicle operated by Gafford and owned by the cab company collided with the truck of plaintiff. As a result of said collision plaintiff sustained damages resulting from personal injuries and damages to his truck. No appeal has been perfected in behalf of defendant Gafford, and for the purpose of this appeal it will be assumed that the collision was the result of negligence on his part.

No contention is made that the relationship of master and servant existed between the cab company and defendant Gafford, nor that Gafford was known to be a careless or reckless driver at the time the cab was rented to him.

The sole ground upon which a recovery was had against the cab company and its insurance carrier was that liability was fixed by the terms of a city ordinance regulating the operation of taxicabs within the city of Norman. The title of that act is as follows:

*605 “Ordinance No. 524 as Amended By
Ordinance No. 574
“An Ordinance regulating the use of taxicabs, automobiles and other vehicles carrying passengers and baggage, for hire, fixing the fare to be charged for the transportation of passengers and baggage, making provision for liability insurance or bond, providing punishment for violation thereof, and declaring an emergency.”

Section 1 of the act is, in part, as follows:

“Taxicabs: The term ‘taxicab’ as used herein shall include all automobiles having a rated seating capacity of seven or fewer persons and used for the transportation of passengers for hire. . . .”

Section 4 of the act is, in part, as follows:

“Before any permit or license for taxicab, as herein defined shall be issued, the owner shall file with the City Clerk an insurance policy issued by an insurance company licensed to do business in this State and approved by the City Commission, providing insurance coverage for each and every taxicab owned, operated or leased by the applicant with a maximum liability of $2,500.00 for the injury or death of any one person and $5,000.00 for the injury or death of any number of persons in any one accident and a limit of maximum liability of $1,000.00 for property damage in any one account, regardless of whether the taxicab was being driven by the owner, his servant, agent or lessee. . . .”

We find it unnecessary to refer to the various provisions of the insurance policy as they may relate to the liability of the insurance carrier. See Utilities Ins. Co. v. Potter, 188 Okla. 145, 105 P. 2d 259.

The trial court was of the view that Gafford was a “lessee” of the cab, within the meaning of the language used in section 4 of the ordinance, and so instructed the jury. Defendants contend that in the use of the word “lessee” the lawmakers had in mind a well-known method of operating a taxicab business whereby the drivers pay the cab companies a stipulated rental for the use of the cab, and retain all fares, in excess of the rental, for themselves; that no intention is shown to attempt to regulate the business of leasing automobiles to the public to be operated by the lessees.

The' question is whether or not the transaction between defendants Gafford and the Dymond Cab Company is within the stated purpose of the act, that is, the regulation of “the use of taxicabs, automobiles and other vehicles carrying passengers and baggage for hire.”

In the case of State v. Dabney, 176 Ark. 1071, 5 S. W. 2d 304, the court had for consideration the question of whether or not one engaged in the business of leasing or renting automobiles was required to pay a special tax levied upon “all motor vehicles, when such vehicles are used for the transportation or delivery of persons for hire.” Therein it was said:

“The undisputed testimony shows that the appellee was not engaged in .the business of operating a jitney, taxicab or motorbus line, but only in renting or hiring to individuals, who applied therefor, cars of different styles and sizes, to be operated by the hirer at his own risk and discretion. Such operation of such business did not constitute appellee either a private or public carrier of passengers or his business the using of motor vehicles for the transportation or delivery of persons or passengers for hire within the meaning of the act. He was not a carrier of passengers at all, . . . . (citing authorities).”

In the case of State v. Bee Hive Auto Service Co., 137 Wash. 372, 242 P. 384, it was shown that defendants were charged with violation of a statute making it unlawful to carry on the business of carrying or transporting passengers for hire in any motor-propelled vehicles within the corporate limits of a city of the first class without procuring a permit to do so. Therein it was said:

“The question for determination, therefore, is, does the cited statute prohibit the letting of an automobile by its owner to another for that other’s use in a city of the first class. That it contains no direct prohibition to that *606 effect must be conceded. If it prohibits the act at all, it does so by reason of the fact that it prohibits the carrying of passengers for hire in a city of the first class without complying with certain conditions, and by reason of the further fact that the letting for hire of an automobile to the use of another is to carry that other as a passenger for hire. But we cannot think the act of leasing has this result. It is true, of course, that the lessor, by the act of leasing, enters into certain obligations, so well understood as not to require enumeration here; but we think it manifest that he does not, by the act, undertake to carry any one, and much less does he become by the act either a public or a private common carrier of passengers for hire.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 403, 131 P.2d 1007, 191 Okla. 604, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dymond-cab-co-inc-v-branson-okla-1942.