McIntee v. Baker

268 N.W. 661, 66 N.D. 669, 1936 N.D. LEXIS 213
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1936
DocketFile No. 6425.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 268 N.W. 661 (McIntee v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntee v. Baker, 268 N.W. 661, 66 N.D. 669, 1936 N.D. LEXIS 213 (N.D. 1936).

Opinion

Burr, J.

This action to recover damages resulting from a collision between a car owned by defendant Baker and a car owned by the plain *670 tiff was tried against Baker only. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. Motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was made and denied and Baker appeals.

There are thirty-three specifications of error, some with several subdivisions; but we are satisfied the undisputed facts determine the issue.

Defendant Baker was the sole owner of two businesses in Minot— one dealing largely with the sale of leather, conducted under the name of A. Baker & Co.; the other dealing with 'the purchase of hides, conducted under the name of the Minot Hide & Fur Company. Baker lived in Minneapolis at the time involved and S. B. Snydal managed the two businesses. Boy Reimer was an employee of the Minot Hide & Fur Company for eight to ten years and up to the present time; but had nothing to do with the leather business. His duty was to buy hides, fur, wool, and such items in an extensive territory. For this work he was furnished a “ton and half stake truck and occasionally a half ton pick up” owned by Baker and used for the Hide & Fur Company business. He was vested with considerable discretion as to the portion of his territory to be visited, was paid a regular salary, purchased hides, drew drafts on the Minot Hide & Fur Company for his purchases, arid took his orders from Snydal principally. The towns of Flaxton, Bowbells, Kenmare, and Minot were within his territory.

Baker at this time owned a 1934 Chevrolet panel truck used in the leather business and involved in the collision. On a few occasions Reimer used it for slight errands around Minot, but soine time prior to the accident was forbidden emphatically by Snydal to take that truck or use it.

On Saturday, July 27, 1935 Snydal drove this Chevrolet truck on the business of Baker, coming into Minot from Dickinson about 10 or 10 :30 P. M. of that day with a thousand to fifteen hundred pounds of leather. He put the truck in the garage without unloading the leather. The next morning, about noon, he left Minot for Lake Metigoshe.

About 5 P. M. of Saturday Reimer, who had been out on his territory, came into Minot with the truck which was under his control and placed it in the garage. The next day Reimer learned of a ball game to be played at Bowbells. He met two friends in the town of Minot, Amundson and Spain, and decided to go to Bowbells to attend the ball *671 game. Without obtaining permission of Snydal or Baker, neither of whom was in Minot at that time, and without the knowledge or consent of either of them, he took this Chevrolet truck and, without unloading the leather, he and his two friends drove to Bowbells to attend the ball game, leaving Minot about 1 B. M. Upon their arrival in Bowbells they stopped at the meat market of one Migge to get some bologna. On entering the shop Reimer asked Migge “How is the hides ?” and Migge told him that they had some and asked him when he was coming up. Reimer told him that probably he “would be there sometime the coming week to pick them up.” Besides attending the ball game Reimer and his two companions drove around Bowbells, then to Elaxton to visit a young lady with whom Reimer was acquainted. While in Flaxton Reimer determined to call upon a young man by the name of Schultz, an acquaintance of his, who was also a buyer of hides and furs, and at times a customer of Baker. He did not meet Schultz, and they started on the return trip — Amundson driving, the three young men sitting together on the front seat. Neither Amundson nor Spain worked for Baker, nor were they pretending to transact any business for him. Neither Baker nor Snydal knew of their presence in the car. When a few miles out from Bowbells on their way to Minot, the collision took place.

As pointed out in Bodle v. Wenner, ante, 502, 266 N. W. 894, the liability of an employer cannot be predicated solely upon the fact that the one at fault was his employee. Neither is it a controlling factor that the ear involved in the collision was owned by the employer. To render the employer liable for the acts of the employee, the latter must have been engaged in the employer’s business at the time of the accident. See Kohlman v. Hyland, 54 N. D. 710, 210 N. W. 643, 50 A.L.R. 1437.

The real issue is whether Reimer was on the business of his employer at the time of the accident, that is, did the collision take place in the course of his employment. The respondent, in his brief, says this “to the respondent appears to be the only real point in the lawsuit, if there is any debatable point therein.”

As pointed out in Marks v. Gray, 251 N. Y. 90, 167 N. E. 181, the test is: “If the work of the employee creates the necessity for travel, he is in the course of his employment, though he is serving *672 at the same time some purpose of his own. Clawson v. Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Co. 231 N. Y. 273, 131 N. E. 914. If, however, the work has had no part in creating the necessity for travel, if the journey would have gone forward though the business errand has been dropped, and would have been canceled upon failure of the private purpose though the business errand was undone, the travel is then personal, and personal the risk.”

True this case cited involved a compensation claim, but there is no difference in principle between being “in the course of his employment” in accidents arising under workmen’s compensation laws and being “in the course of his employment” in other matters involving accidents. In the New York case cited a servant informed his master that he was going to spend a holiday in another town and the master asked him while there to visit a delinquent debtor and demand payment of the debt. It was held in such case the trip was not on the master’s business, the connection with the master’s business was merely incidental.

Barragar v. Industrial Commission, 205 Wis. 550, 238 N. W. 368, 78 A.L.R. 679, states the rules determining whether the trip was on the master’s business or the employee’s on vacation. If it was the employer’s business at the outset, he is still in the course of his employment ordinarily, even though he may detour somewhat for personal matters. If at the outset the trip is made for his own pleasure, he is still outside of the course of employment even though he may detour somewhat for his master’s business. In effect this is the rule adopted in the case of O’Leary v. North Dakota Workmen’s Comp. Bureau, 62 N. D. 457, 243 N. W. 805, and applied in Kohlman v. Hyland, 54 N. D. 710, 210 N. W. 643, 50 A.L.R. 1437, supra.

It is evident that the defendant is not liable. Beimer was not on Baker’s business at the time of the accident nor at any time during that trip. It is true he took a car belonging to Baker and in that car was some property belonging to the employer; but it was not the car he was authorized to use. The property in the car was not such as the employee was authorized to buy or sell, nor did he make the trip to Bowbells in the interests of his employer. It was on an errand, or mission or recreation of his own. It took place on a non-business day and there would have been no trip to Bowbells were it not that the employee and his friends desired to attend the ball game. The fact *673

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 N.W. 661, 66 N.D. 669, 1936 N.D. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintee-v-baker-nd-1936.