Oyola v. Heirs of Collazo

91 P.R. 756
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 19, 1965
DocketNo. R-63-278
StatusPublished

This text of 91 P.R. 756 (Oyola v. Heirs of Collazo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oyola v. Heirs of Collazo, 91 P.R. 756 (prsupreme 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramírez Bages

delivered the opinion of the Court,

[757]*757It is sought' to impose liability on the owners of a tractor -for the injuries sustained by a minor while operating the .same on a farm. For the purposes of disposing of the case, .we must decide whether thé employee of the owners who had ■control of the tractor was authorized by them to invite the 'minor to Climb on the machine and operate it, or whether the minor’s action in operating the tractor “tends to further .'■the purposes of the employer and thus redound to the latter’s benefit.” •

Minor Eustaquio Velázquez Oyóla was seriously injured on April 10, 1962, when a tractor of the so-called “Zaneu,” owned by appellants, overturned while he operated it on a farm of the latter in the ward of Ceiba Sur of the Municipality of Juncos. According to the findings of fact of the trial court, the minor was burning field trash on the farm in question. After he finished and while on his way home, an employee of appellants, Joaquin Rivera Arsuaga, who went past him while operating the tractor, invited him to mount it. They proceeded to a loading crane and on the way back, at Rivera’s request, Velázquez took over the wheel and controls of the tractor. As he approached a bifurcation quite fast, suddenly Rivera told Velázquez to.turn to a certain sugarcane plantation, and when the latter made a sudden turn the tractor overturned and the minor fell underneath, as a result of which he sustained a minute compound fracture of the right tibia and a fracture of the left femur. At the time of the accident Velázquez was not working regularly .for the said heirs, yet on several occasions he had operated .the tractor involved in the accident at the request of Arturo • Collazo, Jr., administrator of the affairs of the heirs and who had instructed Joaquin Rivera to teach the minor how to operate the tractor. The court concluded that in permitting Velázquez to operate the tractor, Rivera did it with the implied authorization of Collazo, Jr., and that Rivera’s neg[758]*758ligence is therefore imputable to defendants. It concluded further that Velázquez was also negligent. It assessed the damages at $10,000 and ruled that his negligence contributed 50 percent to the occurrence of the accident. Accordingly, it ordered appellants to pay to the minor the sum of $5,000 and to the latter’s mother, Rosa Arcilla Oyola, the sum of $2,500, plus costs.

Feeling aggrieved, appellants allege that the trial court erred in holding (1) that the operator of the tractor had implied authorization from his employer to .permit him to operate the tractor in question, and (2) that appellants are liable for the damages suffered by appellee Velázquez Oyola.

According to the doctrine announced in Martínez v. Comunidad M. Fajardo, 90 P.R.R. 451 (1964), liability in cases such as this may not be established by the application of the provisions of § 13-101 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law, 9 L.P.R.A. § 1751.1 We must therefore determine whether defendants’ employee, Joaquin Rivera, had been authorized to seat the injured minor and to teach him how to operate the tractor, or, in the absence of such authorization, whether his action in permitting Velázquez to operate the tractor “tends to further the purposes of the employer and thus redound to the latter’s benefit.”

[759]*759In Martínez, supra, in which we held defendant employer liable for the injuries sustained by a minor while riding in a “Zancú” tractor, it was held that the minor had been invited by the operator of the tractor, who was defendant’s employee, to help him to couple some cars to a tractor, and the accident occurred when the employee was taking the minor on the tractor to the place where he had picked him up. In this case it was shown that the employee alone could not couple the cars and that there was no one around to help him. We rightly concluded that the employee had implied authorization to seek the help required of the injured in order to further the purposes of his employer. In Vargas Vargas v. Belthor Cáceres Corporation, 90 P.R.R. 36 (1964), we also held that the employer of the operator of a vehicle used for selling and delivering merchandise to the employer’s customers was liable for the injuries sustained by a minor whom the employee was carrying in the vehicle in violation of specific instructions not to do it, and that he helped the employee by watching the merchandise in the vehicle while the latter absented himself in order to take orders from the customers and to deliver the merchandise. In Martínez v. U.S. Casualty Co., 79 P.R.R. 561 (1956), we held a municipality liable for the death of a person who was riding in a municipal ambulance in order to get some medicine at the drugstore for his sick wife who shortly before had been driven in the ambulance to the municipal hospital. The death was produced when the ambulance crashed into a post while it was being negligently operated by a Commonwealth fireman who had been asked by the mayor to transport the sick woman. We concluded in this case that the driver’s action in taking the husband to get the medicine had a reasonable and pertinent relation with the interests of the municipality, since it tended to carry out the ultimate objective of the municipality which was to provide the best public-charity service to the community. In Rivera v. Maldonado, 72 P.R.R. 448, [760]*760456 (1951), we refused to hold liable the owner of a vehicle for the injuries sustained by plaintiff while riding therein, since “It was neither alleged nor proved that the chauffeur’s invitation to Juan Rivera to get in the truck was in order to perform any task for the benefit of the owner thereof.” In Lloréns v. Lozada, 73 P.R.R. 260 (1952), we held that the owner of a truck which was parked on. a road with no lights by the driver while he went home to sleep was liable for the death of a person when his car struck the truck thus negligently parked. We concluded that in parking the truck the driver did not deviate from the duties of his employment, but that his primary purpose was to be in a position to serve his employer the next day, and that his negligence in parking is attributable to the employer. The fact that the driver violated his instructions to park the truck at night in the loading station and never leave it on the road is no defense in these cases. See, also, Mártir Santiago v. Pueblo Supermarket, 88 P.R.R. 222 (1963).

In the light of the doctrine announced, it is necessary to examine the evidence in order to determine whether it sustains the trial court’s finding that Collazo, Jr., had given instructions to Joaquin Rivera to teach minor Velázquez to operate the tractor, and that on several occasions the minor had operated the tractor at the request of Collazo, Jr. The court made no determination as to whether or not the fact that the minor actually operated the tractor redounded to the benefit of defendants as owners thereof.

On direct examination, Velázquez testified what the trial judge recited in his findings of fact referred to above regarding the manner in which the accident occurred. He did not testify, nor does any evidence appear from the record, that Collazo had given instructions to operator Rivera to teach Velázquez to operate the tractor. In our judgment, the evidence does not sustain the conclusion that Rivera had been authorized' to teach Velázquez to operate the tractor. On [761]

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91 P.R. 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oyola-v-heirs-of-collazo-prsupreme-1965.