Monetti v. Standard Oil Co.

195 So. 89, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 329
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1940
DocketNo. 17337.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 195 So. 89 (Monetti v. Standard Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monetti v. Standard Oil Co., 195 So. 89, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 329 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Mrs. Julia Monetti brings this suit in tort against Albert Scott, William Gomez and Standard Oil Company of Louisiana. The negligence on which the suit is founded is alleged to have been a careless act of Scott in moving, from in front of the gasoline filling station of the Standard Oil Company at West End in New Orleans, a motorcycle which had been left by an unknown owner in such position as to im *91 pede traffic to and from the station. Gomez and the Standard Oil Company, to which we shall hereafter refer as the “oil company”, are made defendants on the theory that Scott, when he moved the motorcycle and carelessly permitted it to roll against plaintiff, was a servant or employee of Gomez and of the oil company and was, at the time, acting within the scope of his employment.

Plaintiff alleges that on Sunday morning, May 23, 1937, some unknown person had parked a heavy delivery motorcycle in front of the West End service station of the oil company; that this motorcycle was parked in the passageway through which customers of the station entered and left and that it impeded and obstructed the passage of customers to and from the station ; that Scott, an attendant at the said station, saw that the motorcycle impeded traffic, and, therefore, attempted to push it from in front of the station to the other side of the road; that Scott did not start the motor, but carelessly and negligently permitted the motorcycle to roll into the soft drink stand of petitioner, to crash through the railing and to strike petitioner, inflicting the injuries.

Petitioner further alleges that, at the time of the accident, Scott was in the employ of Gomez and of the oil company and that he was acting in the capacity of service station attendant and that the act which resulted in petitioner’s injuries was done within the scope of his employment.

It is not denied that the accident occurred and, in fact, it is not seriously contended that Scott was not negligent in permitting the motorcycle to escape from his grasp and to crash into plaintiff and there is no serious defense interposed on behalf of either Scott or Gomez. Gomez admits that Scott was his employee and, accordingly, that he is responsible, along with Scott, for the results of the negligent acts of the latter committed within the scope of his employment, but all defendants deny that Scott was an employee of the oil company. It is admitted that Gomez was the agent of the oil company, employed by it to superintend and manage and operate its oil station on a commission basis, but it is contended that, in. the agency contract between Gomez and the oil company, though, by inference, Gomez was authorized to employ others to assist him, it was especially provided that any such other person employed should not be considered as an employee of the oil company, but should be looked upon solely as an employee of Gomez. It is not maintained that Gomez himself was an independent contractor, operating the oil station for his own account, it being admitted, as we have said, that he himself was an agent of the oil company, but it is contended that, by the said agency contract, so far as any other employee might be concerned, he was made an independent employer and stood between any such other employee and the oil company.

. In the court below there was judgment in favor of plaintiff solidarily against Gomez and Scott in the sum of $1,200 and plaintiff’s suit as against the oil company was dismissed. From this judgment plaintiff has appealed, but we find no appeal on behalf of either Gomez or Scotti

The sole question, then, is whether the relationship between Scott and the oil company was such as to render the latter liable for the negligent acts of the former.

It is well to remember that Gomez himself was not an independent contractor. Not only is he designated in the contract as an agent of the oil company and not only is he shown to have been employed to manage and operate the oil station for the company, but it appears that the company retained the right to control entirely his operations in managing the said station and the further right to discharge him at will by terminating the contract.

There is some dispute among counsel concerning the question of the legal relationship which exists between a principal and an employee of an agent where the employee is engaged by the agent with the consent of the principal, and there is, no doubt, room for disagreement concerning the views of the text-writers and of the authors of judicial opinions on that subject. Mr. Mechem, author of a treatise on agency, is one of the leading writers on the subject. The views of this author, as expressed in his second edition, are discussed by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Gulf Refining Company v. Brown, 93 F.2d 870, 874, 116 A.L.R. 449, which case involves a question very similar to that presented, here. There the court concludes that there is no proper foundation for the view that a principal “may avoid liability for the conduct of subagents by entering into an agreement like that in the present case wherein the agent is empowered to employ *92 assistants to do the work and agrees to assume responsibility for their acts.” The court then shows, — as we think, correctly, —that neither in the work of Mr. Mechem, nor in the Restatement of the Law of Agency of the American Law Institute, is there any indication of such a view and that the sounder doctrine is to the effect that “when there is an express or implied consent to the appointment of the subagent as the agent of the principal, there arises such a privity between the subagent and the principal as renders the latter liable for the acts of the subagent to the same extent as in the case of any other agent; * * * ”. In other words, that, for the acts of a subagent, the principal is liable if the employment of the subagent was authorized and if the acts were within the scope of -the employment and were within the reasonable contemplation of the parties as necessary in the carrying out of the purpose for which the principal contracted with the agent. This view finds approval in Goff v. Sinclair Refining Company, La.App., 162 So. 452, which involves facts strikingly similar to those involved here.

Counsel for defendant characterize that case as inapplicable here because there the court merely overruled an exception and remanded the matter for trial on the merits. But the court did set forth in full the allegations on which it was sought to hold the principal liable for the acts of the employee of the so-called “independent contractor” and said that, if the evidence should show these allegations to be true, then there would be liability in the principal. We note a remarkable similarity between the allegations of that petition and the facts disclosed in this record.

Counsel for defendant find much comfort in the decision of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Texas Company v. Brice, 26 F.2d 164, 165, which case, it is true, involved facts presenting for solution a legal question somewhat similar to that before us. There Hutton was either the agent or independent contractor, who had employed the driver whose negligence caused the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 89, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monetti-v-standard-oil-co-lactapp-1940.