Hynek v. Milwaukee Automobile Insurance

11 N.W.2d 352, 243 Wis. 591, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 155
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 N.W.2d 352 (Hynek v. Milwaukee Automobile Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hynek v. Milwaukee Automobile Insurance, 11 N.W.2d 352, 243 Wis. 591, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 155 (Wis. 1943).

Opinion

Wickhem, J.

On-the evening of December 31, 1940, plaintiff, Frank Hynek, was at his home in Oconomowoc when defendant, Henry Degener, called to get his wife who was visiting there. Degener lived five miles west of Oconomowoc, a short distance south of Highway 19. Plaintiff told Degener that he had received word of his father’s death at Richland Center and- that he planned to go to the home of one Melchior to borrow his automobile, as plaintiff’s car was not in condition for so long a drive. Plaintiff asked Degener whether he would drive him to Melchior’s, but Degener did not reply. After supper he asked Degener whether he wanted to ride along to Melchior’s and:Degener answered affirmatively. They left the house-together and *593 upon the discovery that Degener’s car was parked in the driveway, Degener volunteered to drive his car to Melchior’s. This involved a trip of nine miles on Degener’s part, a return to Oconomowoc, and then a drive home over much the same route. Shortly after Degener and Hynek had started for Melchior’s there was a collision between the Degener car and a truck owned by Motor Transport Company, operated by its employee, and insured by Milwaukee Automobile Insurance Company. Plaintiff sustained personal injuries -in this collision.

The jury found the driVer óf the Motor Transport truck sixty per cent negligent and Degener forty per cent negligent and fixed the damages. No question arises upon this appeal as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict.

Defendants’ claim is that upon the facts of this case Degener was the agent of plaintiff, his negligence imputed to plaintiff and the latter’s recovery subject to diminution'by the percentage of negligence found1 by the jury to be attributable to Degener. Hence, the appéal is limited to the question whether, as a matter of law, upon the undisputed facts, Degener was driving as the agent of plaintiff. Defendants contend that this is a clear case of gratuitous agency and that the negligence of Degener is imputed to plaintiff. The case of Georgeson v. Nielsen, 214 Wis. 191, 252 N. W. 576, is claimed to be exactly in point and to establish defendants’ position. In that case plaintiff had borrowed a trailer to transport three cows a distance of fifteen miles to a pasture. Plaintiff’s automobile had no hitch for connecting the trailer. He went to a garage to have a hitch made and while there Dennis came along driving a car equipped with a hitch. Dennis offered to attach the trailer to his car, go with Georgeson, and haul the cattle to their destination. In the course of transporting the cattle a collision occurred resulting in part, as the jury found, from the negligence of Dennis. This court held that although Dennis was to receive no compensation a relationship of *594 agency and not that of Host-guest existed. According to defendants this case cannot be reconciled with dictum in Bennett v. Nebel, 199 Wis. 334, 226 N. W. 395, and is distinguishable from Canzoneri v. Heckert, 223 Wis. 25, 269 N. W. 716, and Sommerfield v. Flury, 198 Wis. 163, 223 N. W. 408, cases strongly relied upon by plaintiff. In the Bennett Case it is said that the mere fact that a passenger requests the driver to go to a certain destination, even if the passenger indicates the route to be taken, is not enough to warrant imputing negligence of the driver to the passenger. Considered in its context, it is not clear that the statement in the Bennett Case has any application here at all as it appears to refer to a passenger in a public conveyance. The court in the Bennett Case held that the issue of agency had not been tried.

While it is true that the factual situation in the Flury Case, •supra, was different from that involved here, we nevertheless consider that that case represents the proper starting point in considering the question here involved. In that case a threshing crew was assembled at a farm when a telephone message came that certain buildings were on fire about five miles distant and calling for help. One Krueger jumped into his automobile in response to the call, and without any invitation on his part, plaintiffs also got into the car. On the way to the fire Krueger’s car collided with a truck belonging to defendant and plaintiffs suffered injuries. Upon appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs it was contended that all of those in the Krueger car were engaged in a joint undertaking, and that Krueger as driver was liable only for gross negligence. This court repudiated that contention on the ground, (1) that the trip involved no joint duty as whatever duty devolved upon the parties by the custom of the neighborhood was several and individual rather than joint and common; (2) that there was no financial or business interest involved; and (3) there was no mutual agency between them.

*595 Having laid down this much, the court proceeds to consider whether some relationship other than that of host-guest did not exist’between the driver and those riding in the car. It was claimed on behalf of defendants that the relationship of host-guest should not exist where the trip is pursuant to an agreement, express or implied, and for the common benefit of all. This contention was also repudiated and the court strongly intimates that the few scattered cases where the courts have considered relationships purely social in their nature, as giving rise to a joint undertaking, are ill-considered, citing Krause v. Hall, 195 Wis. 565, 217 N. W. 290. While the Flury Case, supra, involved the element of joint enterprise, it bears strongly upon the question of gratuitous agency because the relationship arising out of a joint enterprise that would operate to impute the negligence of one enterpriser to his associates would necessarily be grounded upon principles of agency. If joint enterprises do not frequently or ever arise out of purely social relationships, neither do relationships of agency ordinarily so arise.

This is best illustrated by Renich v. Klein, 230 Wis. 123, 283 N. W. 288. In that case the driver of the truck in which plaintiff was riding had been parked in front of a place of business. It was in the care of a driver and the owner of a truck was performing some business errand near by. Plaintiff’s decedent, an old man seventy-one years of age, came along, got into the cab without invitation, closed the door and requested that the driver of the truck take him up to the corner to catch a bus which was waiting there. The request was acceded to, and in the course of the trip the accident happened and plaintiff’s decedent was injured. The trial court was of the view that the driver was the agent of the deceased, and that the driver’s negligence was imputed to the deceased. This court held to the contrary and concluded that a relationship of host and guest existed. This court stated (p. 126) :

*596 “This testimony shows only an act of friendly courtesy which Flentz extended to Giesing because he felt sorry for him and naturally wanted to help him out.”

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.W.2d 352, 243 Wis. 591, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hynek-v-milwaukee-automobile-insurance-wis-1943.