James v. J. S. Williams & Son, Inc.

150 So. 9, 177 La. 1033, 1933 La. LEXIS 1791
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 7, 1933
DocketNo. 32327.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 150 So. 9 (James v. J. S. Williams & Son, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. J. S. Williams & Son, Inc., 150 So. 9, 177 La. 1033, 1933 La. LEXIS 1791 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

While on a street in the city of Shreveport, Neita James was struck and seriously* injured by a motor vehicle belonging to the defendant. She sued for damages, alleging that the vehicle was at the time of the accident being operated by Boy Rhodes, an employee of defendant; that the said Rhodes was on a mission for his employer and acting within the course and scope of his employment; and that the accident and resulting injury were due solely to his fault and negligence.

These allegations, were specifically denied by defendant in its answer.

The trial judge found and held that plaintiff was injured by defendant’s motor vehicle while being operated by one of its employees, and that the injury was due to the driver’s fault and negligence, but rejected plaintiff’s demands on the ground that the driver was on a mission of his own at the time of the accident, and was not acting within the scope of his employment, and was not therefore the agent of the defendant. The case was carried to the Court of Appeal for the Second circuit. That court approved the ruling of the district court and affirmed the judgment. 143 So. 84.

*1037 1. The law under which plaintiff seeks to hold defendant liable for her injury and damage is article 2320 of the Civil Code, which reads in part:

“Masters and Servants. Masters and 'employers are answerable for the damage occasioned by their servants and overseers, in the exercise of the functions in which they are employed.”

Learned counsel for plaintiff earnestly contend that Rhodes, defendant’s employee, was, at the time of the accident, in the exercise of the functions in which he was employed. The facts found by both the district court and the Court of Appeal are that defendant owns and; operates an undertaking- establishment in Shreveport and, in the conduct of its business, uses an ambulance referred to as a “funeral car,” which was kept in a garage at defendant’s place of business. Roy Rhodes and a man named Jemison were employed as helpers in the establishment; Rhodes being employed as driver of the funeral car, which was used only in connection with defendant’s business. At 5:30 p. m. on February 23, after the day’s work was done, Jemison requested Rhodes to take him home in the funeral car. Rhodes did so, and while on his way back to the defendant’s garage, where he intended to store the car for the night, he ran over plaintiff and injured her.

Rhodes was employed to drive the vehicle only when used in connection with defendant’s business, and as directed by his employer. Defendant was not obligated to transport any of its employees to their homes from its place of business after their work for the day was done, nor to bring them back, and it was therefore no part of Rhodes’ duty as employee to do so. Rhodes took the car and drove it on this occasion without the knowledge or consent, either express or implied, of his enfployer. When he took the car to carry Jemison home, he was clearly on a mission of his own connected in no way with his employment.

This is virtually conceded by counsel for plaintiff. But they contend that even if it be true that Rhodes used defendant’s car without its knowledge or consent and on a mission in no sense connected with his employment in carrying Jemison to his home, yet while on his way back to the garage for the purpose of restoring the ear to its usual place, he was, while returning, on a mission for his employer. The theory of this contention is that even though an employee takes and uses his employer’s motor vehicle without authority and engages in an enterprise in no sense connected with his duties as an employee, yet, when his own private mission is at an end, he re-enters his employment and is engaged on a mission for his master the moment he turns and starts on his return trip for the purpose of restoring the car to the employer’s premises.

Counsel for plaintiff in their brief say that Rhodes had no individual purpose to sub-serve in using the car, and that at the time of the accident his sole purpose in driving the car along the street where the accident took place was “to take it back to its proper place so that it would be ready for use by his employer.”

Whether Rhodes took the ear to sub-serve an “individual purpose” of his own, or whether he took and used it solely to accommodate Jemison, is not material. In either *1039 event, he was no-t using it “in the exercise of the functions” for which he was employed, and therefore the relationship of master and servant, or employer and employee, was suspended while the car was being so used, and the doctrine of respondeat superior applies “only when the relation of master and servant is shown to exist between the wrongdoer and the person sought to be charged for the result of some neglect or wrong, at the time and in respect to the very transaction out of which the injury arose.”

The mere fact that the person to whose negligent and wrongful act the injury and damage is attributable was in the general employment of another person “does not necessarily make the látter the master, and responsible for his acts. Tpe master is the person in whose business he is engaged at the time and who has the right to control and direct his conduct.” Berry on Automobiles (6th Ed.) Vol. 2, § 1315; Atkins v. Points, 148 La. 958, 88 So. 231, 232; Tinker v. Hirst, 162 La. 209, 110 So. 324.

Liability in cases of this kind depends, not upon the fact of ownership of the car and the general employment of the person who drives it and causes the injury, but upon whether the driver was, at the time of the injury, in. the exercise of the functions for which he was employed, for it is only while in the exercise of those functions that the relationship of master and servant' or principal and agent exists.

An employee is the agent or servant of his employer only while engaged ini doing for his employer something which he has been directed to do or some act which can be reasonably and, fairly said to be a natural incident of the employment, or logically and naturally connected therewith. But when an employee turns entirely and wholly aside from the purposes for which he was employed and engages in some act or enterprise in no way connected with or incidental to his employment, the employer is not responsible for damages caused by the employee while so engaged.

The rule which prevails here and elsewhere is that “the owner of an automobile is not liable to one who is injured by the negligence of his chauffeur while operating the machine without his knowledge or permission, and for a purpose other then that for which he was employed, as where the driver is on errand personal to himself.” Tinker v. Hirst, supra; 2 R. C. L. 1198, § 33.

“The reason for the rule is that, in order to render the owner liable for the acts of the servant, the relationship of master and servant must exist at the time of such acts, and such acts must be done by the servant within the scope of his employment.”

See note to Hickson v. Walker Co., 68 A. L. R. 1051, supplementing note in 45 A. L. R. 478.

When Rhodes took defendant’s car to ear- \ ry Jemison home, he departed entirely from the scope of his. employment.

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150 So. 9, 177 La. 1033, 1933 La. LEXIS 1791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-j-s-williams-son-inc-la-1933.