Sare, Sare, Sare v. Stetz, Podorski

214 P.2d 486, 67 Wyo. 55, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 5
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1950
Docket2443
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 214 P.2d 486 (Sare, Sare, Sare v. Stetz, Podorski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sare, Sare, Sare v. Stetz, Podorski, 214 P.2d 486, 67 Wyo. 55, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 5 (Wyo. 1950).

Opinion

*59 OPINION.

This is a direct appeal proceeding to review the action of the District Court of Sheridan County in declining to enter a judgment against the defendant, Mary Podorski in litigation growing out of a collision between two automobiles traveling in opposite directions on a state highway not far from the City of Sheridan. The accident occurred October 26, 1947 about 11:30 A. M. The cause was entitled: ARCHIE SARE, and WILLIAM SARE and KEITH SARE, by their next friend, ARCHIE SARE, Plaintiffs vs. RAYMOND STETZ, also known as RAY STETZ, and MARY PO-DORSKI, Defendants. The collision, as the trial court found, resulted as the consequence of the negligence of the defendant, Raymond Stetz in driving his automobile on the wrong side (his left side) of the highway which both cars were using at the time. A judgment was entered against the defendant, Raymond *60 Stetz and from that judgment no appeal has been prosecuted so far as presented by the record before us.

It was alleged in plaintiffs’ petition in paragraph numbered “III A” as an amendment thereto in addition to other averments designed to show the negligence of the defendant last mentioned and the injuries suffered by the plaintiffs, William and Keith Sare as follows:

“That said automobile, owned by the Defendant, Mary Podorski, also known as Mary Podorski, was owned, kept and used by said Defendant as a family car and was furnished by said Defendant to her said son, the Defendant, Raymond Stetz, also known as Ray Stetz, for use as a pleasure car, and family conveyance; that the said Raymond Stetz, also known as Ray Stetz at all times herein mentioned, and at the time of the collision herein complained of, was a member of the family of the Defendant Mary Podorski and resided with the said Mary Podorski, his mother, and was at the time of said collision, using said automobile as a family car with the permission and consent and implied direction of the said Defendant, Mary Podorski. That the said Defendant, Raymond Stetz, also known as Ray Stetz was at said time, a minor residing in the home of his said mother, Mary Podorski, and the said Defendant, Mary Podorski was under legal and moral obligation to support and provide for her said son.”

Plaintiffs also among other thing alleged in Paragraph VI of said petition that:

“the Defendant Raymond Stetz was driving the said Buick automobile owned by his said mother Mary Podorski, with her full knowledge, consent and approval and for and on her behalf and as her agent and representative in the operation of said car and on said occasion said Defendant disregarding his duty in that behalf, did wilfully and wantonly, neglectfully and carelessly and improperly propel and operate said automobile by driving the same at said time and place upon the wrong side of the highway.”

*61 To plaintiffs’ amended pleading the defendants interposed a general denial.

On the trial of the action which was to court without a jury, it was stipulated between the parties represented by their counsel that:

“the facts alleged in paragraph No. 3-A offered as an amendment and attached and now made a part of the plaintiffs’ petition as Amended are true, and that evidence in support of said allegations is expressly waived and said allegations are admitted.”

In connection with the quoted part of plaintiffs’ petition and the stipulation aforesaid and to be considered therewith, the defendant, Raymond Stetz testified on cross examination, as we abstract his testimony, that at the time this accident happened he was eighteen years old, then living with his mother and father at 1435 N. Main St.; that his mother owned the car Stetz was driving; that she did not drive the car; that in their household lived his mother and father and several boarders; that he and his folks had had the car involved in this accident about a year and a half; that Stetz had been driving it all that time and no one else drove it; that the car was bought for him; that he drove it if and when he wanted to of his free will; that he was not in school when the accident happened as he had graduated from the Sheridan High School in 1946; that he had the car just after he graduated, it being, in a way, given to him as a graduation present; that his mother never did drive the car; that at the time of the accident he was going up to the air port to do some flying; that he had no air plane but he had worked at the air port for more than five years; that he was not working for the air port folks on the day of the accident but was going to fly Arch Hall’s plane.

*62 On direct examination he had previously stated that he was on his way to the air port to go flying and that he was not on any errand or anything of that sort for his mother; that it was entirely his own affair to arrive at the air port. In appellants’ brief it is said that there is:

“presented to this Court by this case the question as to whether or not the ‘family-purpose doctrine’ applies in Wyoming. There is no other issue in the case.”

Both parties to this record have thus presented the matter in brief work, and appellants by their counsels’ argument also. We will, accordingly, examine the question adhering to that view of the case.

The common and almost universal use of the automobile in this country has brought into existence one of the most controversial doctrines in the law of tort, agency, and master and servant. That doctrine has been variously designated as the “family purpose doctrine”, the “family service rule”, the “family automobile doctrine” or the “family car rule”.

5 Blashfield’s Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice (Perm. Ed.) pp. 266-267, Section 3111 states this rule as follows:

“When an automobile is maintained by the owner thereof for the general use and convenience of his or her family, such owner is liable for the negligence of a member of the family, having general authority to drive the car, while it is being used as such family car;, that is, for the pleasure or convenience of the family or a member of it.”

The underlying theory advanced in support of the rule seems to be substantially as follows: That every man who undertakes to conduct his affairs through others should remain bound to so manage them that third persons will not be hurt by any breach of legal *63 duty on the part of the others so entrusted with his concerns while they are engaged upon his affairs and within the scope of their authority, and that when a paterfamilias maintains an automobile for the pleasure, use, and convenience of his family and in furtherance of such purpose authorizes members of his household to use it for that purpose he ipso facto makes such pleasure his affair or “business” and makes members of the family operating the car for uses of this character his agents engaged in the conduct of his affairs. O’Keefe vs. Fitzgerald, 106 Conn. 294, 137 Atl. 858; Stickney vs. Epstein, 100 Conn. 170, 123 Atl. 1.

However, a considerable majority of the appellate courts of the nation have declined to recognize the family purpose doctrine described above.

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Bluebook (online)
214 P.2d 486, 67 Wyo. 55, 1950 Wyo. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sare-sare-sare-v-stetz-podorski-wyo-1950.