Salamone v. Riczker

590 N.E.2d 698, 32 Mass. App. Ct. 429
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 24, 1992
Docket90-P-1460
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 590 N.E.2d 698 (Salamone v. Riczker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salamone v. Riczker, 590 N.E.2d 698, 32 Mass. App. Ct. 429 (Mass. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Kass, J.

What constitutes control of property sufficient to make a negligent entrustment is the principal question to be depided. That issue was central to a jury verdict in favor of the.plaintiffs against Tal Riczker.

During the fall of 1987, Tal, fifteen years old at the time, found a set of keys to a car owned by his father. 3 He hid them under a radiator in a bedroom in his family’s house. There they remained until the night of October 3, 1987, a Saturday, when Tal’s parents were away. Tal telephoned two friends, Christopher Murphy and Peter Hillman, invited them over to spend the night, and told them they would be able to drive the car. Neither Murphy or Hillman was old enough to hold a driver’s license, as Tal knew.

Tal drove the car to two video stores and returned to the Riczker house in Sudbury without incident. He put the keys back in the same hiding place, taking care that he did this unobserved by his friends. The next day, while Tal was in the shower, his friends asked him to let them take a spin in the car. At first, Tal refused, but in the face of their importuning, he gave in and revealed the hiding place. Tal admonished his friends to be careful, and they agreed that if anything were to happen, it would be the fault of whoever was at the wheel.

Hillman drove first, backing the car out of the driveway and then proceeding left onto Dutton Road. After five minutes the boys changed places and Murphy got behind the wheel. On the return to the Riczker house, Murphy lost control of the car and struck Frank Salamone, who was jogging along the side of the road.

1. Negligent entrustment. In support of his position that he is not liable, Tal argues that he did not have control over his *431 father’s car within the meaning of G. L. c. 90, § 12, 4 *6*or cases such as Leone v. Doran, 363 Mass. 1, 7-8 (1973), 5 and Davis v. Walent, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 83, 87 (1983). Those decisions describe ownership or control of the instrumentality with which damage is done as a necessary element in proving a case of negligent entrustment; e.g., one cannot be careless about letting another drive a motor vehicle unless one owns or controls that motor vehicle. Amplifying on the principle, in Leone v. Doran, supra at 7, the court spoke of “a sufficient proprietary interest as to permit the use of the vehicle by others.”

Tal contends that a “proprietary interest” exists only when the defendant has the right to control the vehicle. For that proposition there is some authority. See Lopez v. Longer, 114 Idaho 873, 875 (1988); Tosh v. Scott, 129 Ill. App. 3d 322, 323 (1984). The owner of the Riczker car, Tal’s father, had not permitted his under-age son to use it and did not know he had acquired the means, the keys, to use it. Tal, therefore did not have a legitimate right to use the car. He did, however, at the critical time have physical dominion over the car, albeit through an act of usurpation, filching the keys. Through those keys he controlled the use of the car and claimed the right to decide who else might drive it. We think the better view is to think of control for purposes of negligent entrustment in terms of the ability to determine whether another may use the potentially dangerous instrumentality. See Land v. Niehaus, 340 So. 2d 760, 762 (Ala. 1976). To hold otherwise would produce the paradox that a person who comes into unauthorized physical control of a car, such as a car thief, would be less subject to civil liability for negligent entrustment than someone authorized to have physical control, such as an owner.

*432 There was sufficient evidence before the jury to allow them to find that on the day of the accident, Tal exercised control over the Riczker car in the sense we have discussed that word. Tal kept the set of keys to the car for several weeks in a place known only to him. When he invited his friends to his house and indicated they would have the use of the car, Tal continued to keep the location of the keys secret. In that manner he controlled access to the car. Finally, he granted permission to his friends to use the car and provided the means by telling them where to find the keys.

After retiring to deliberate, the jury sent to the trial judge the following question: “If Tal was not legally in control of the car, was he responsible for the car because he was in physical control of the car?” The jurors astutely identified the itchy spot in the case. The judge responded at some length, but the essence of that response was in the following sentence: “So, the answer to that is that Tal could be held responsible in this action if he exercised actual control over the car, as distinguished from legal control, because there is no evidence that he had any legal control.” That, in light of what we have said above, was a correct statement of the law. Certainly the judge’s supplementary instruction did not, as Tal asserts on appeal, “eliminat[e] the jury’s role as a finder of fact.”

2. Other matters. Four other points were pressed on appeal. They are without weight and we shall consider them in relatively summary fashion.

(a) Proximate cause. The defendant Tal protests that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that negligence on his part was a proximate cause of Frank Salamone’s injuries. Tal knew that Murphy was too young to hold a driver’s license or even a learner’s permit. He placed Murphy in a position where he could do injury, a possibility of which he was conscious because he discussed with his friends who should take the rap if anything went amiss. Tal, thus, could have been found to be the efficient cause that set in motion a train of events leading to the accident. Letting his friends have the keys put them in a position where they *433 could — predictably — cause injury. See Davis v. Walent, 16 Mass. App. Ct. at 88-89.

(b) Standard of care. The evidence of the conversation of the boys about how blame would be assigned should there be an accident was sufficient to take to the jury the question whether Tal, at age fifteen, appreciated the danger inherent in allowing an untrained, unlicensed, and inexperienced driver to operate the car.

(c) Instruction on proximate cause. The judge gave a correct instruction explaining proximate cause to the jury and the place of intervening negligence in considering proximate cause. The defendant’s quarrel with the instruction amounts to nothing more than a preference for certain specific language. A judge is not bound to charge the jury using the exact language — even if correct — requested “by a party. Corsetti v. Stone Co., 396 Mass. 1, 14-15 (1985). Willander v.

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Bluebook (online)
590 N.E.2d 698, 32 Mass. App. Ct. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salamone-v-riczker-massappct-1992.