Schoenherr v. Hartfield

172 A.D. 294, 158 N.Y.S. 388, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10311
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 14, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 172 A.D. 294 (Schoenherr v. Hartfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoenherr v. Hartfield, 172 A.D. 294, 158 N.Y.S. 388, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10311 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

JENKS, P. J.:

The action is for negligence. The plaintiff’s intestate, attempting to cross a city street in the borough of Brooklyn, was struck and was killed by a motor car driven by Babcock, the alleged chauffeur of defendant Hartfield, the alleged owner of the car. Hartfield was in Europe at the time of the casualty, and did not return therefrom until some weeks thereafter. The litigation, in addition to the questions of contributory negligence and of negligence, involved the ownership of the car, the service of Babcock, and the question whether at the time of the casualty he was about Hartfield’s business. The uncontradicted evidence elicited by the plaintiff is that Babcock traveled from the garage in the borough of Manhattan, where the car was kept, to the borough of Brooklyn to visit his wife at their home and to give money to her. But it was the contention of the plaintiff that the trip was also for the incidental purpose of testing the car, which had been under repair. The verdict was for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff insists that certain exceptions to several rulings of the court are well taken. The plaintiff called as a witness Patten, a detective sergeant, who had talked with Babcock seventeen hours after the casualty, and under repeated objections and exceptions Patten testified to a subsequent conversation between Patten and Hartfield, whereat Patten had repeated to the defendant certain statements which Babcock had made to Patten in the said talk between them. The said conversation between Patten and Hartfield was not confined, however, to repetition of the said statements of Babcock, and finally, at the close of Patten’s testimony, the court under exception struck out so much of his testimony as related to the alleged statements by Babcock to Patten as to how the accident happened and what Babcock did in the said absence of the defendant. After protest and discussion, wherein the plaintiff’s counsel said that he did not know what “ goes out,” the court stated: “I said those matters which the witness stated as having been stated to him by Babcock as to what he did in the absence of Mr. Hartfield in Europe, what he said and what he did, about his work and about his services.” The court had not said precisely this, but had ruled out the testimony of Patten [296]*296of alleged statements by Babcock to Patten “as to how the accident happened and what' he did in the absence of Mr. Hartfield.” The testimony which could be material and which was ruled out is that Patten had ashed Babcock what he was doing in Brooklyn, and he said he had to take the car out to have it tested. “ ‘ I had received my wages that day and I took them over to my wife. And what difference did it make whether I tested the machine in Brooklyn or Manhattan, so long as I was testing it ? ’ ” It does not appear that the defendant made any comment to Patten when Patten had repeated these statements of Babcock. So that all that could be argued as making against the defendant is that, without comment, he heard from Patten that Babcock had said to Patten that he (Babcock) went on a trip to Brooklyn to take his wages to his wife, and that, as he had to take the car out to test it, he could test it on such a trip. In the language of Reed v. McCord (160 N. Y. at 341), if these statements had remained in the case, “ That would have been in no sense an admission of any fact pertinent to the issue, but a mere admission of what he (defendant) had heard without adoption or indorsement. Such evidence is clearly inadmissible. (Stephens v. Vroman, 16 N. Y. 381.) ” (See, too, People v. Smith, 172 N. Y. 236.) In Stephens v. Vroman (supra) the court say: “The admission only proves that such out-of-door statements were actually made; but the statements themselves being worthless and incompetent as instruments of evidence, the manner in which they are brought to the notice of the jury is immaterial. The jurors have no right to be informed of them in any manner.” (See note to 1 Greenl. Ev. [15th ed.] § 202, where it is said that this ruling is in accord with that made in Roe v. Ferrars, 2 B. & P. 542, 548, and for the same reason.) The learned counsel for the appellant cites section 1053 of Wigmore on Evidence. In his note to that section Professor Wigmore cites in “ Accord Reed v. McCord (supra), with this comment: “ (if not merely in form an admission that he had heard of the fact). ” Further, such statements of Babcock cannot be regarded as the admissions of a servant, and, therefore, as binding upon the defendant. (Anderson v. Rome, W. & O. R. R. Co., 54 N. Y. 334; State Bank v. Brocton Fruit Juice Co., 208 id. 495.)

[297]*297It is insisted that the court erred in refusal to charge this instruction, requested with the comment that counsel thought that the court had “ covered it:” “If the servant, in doing his master’s business, departs from his course to do something for himself, and, after doing his own work, is returning to the work of the master, and negligently injures one on the way back, the master is liable for the damage inflicted.” The court: “ I think I said it better than that. After returning to and is engaged in the work of his master—I charge that.” The court had already charged fully and fairly upon the subject.

The plaintiff excepted to the following instruction, given after the main charge, upon request of the defendant: “If the jury find from the evidence in the case that when Babcock left the garage that night, his primary object was to go to his wife’s home in Brooklyn and give her some money, then he was not on his employer’s business.” The jury could have found, indeed the proof thereof adduced from the plaintiff’s witnesses was undisputed, as the court said in its charge, that Babcock took the car from the garage in Hew York to his home in Brooklyn to call upon his wife to give her money, and that thereafter he, with his companions, left there and, after stopping at a place of entertainment, drove the car back to the garage in Hew York. There is no proof that even suggests that this errand was within the scope of Babcock’s authority. The most that can be asserted to fasten liability upon the master is that the chauffeur had the implied authority to test the car; that such a test was required, and that it was within his authority to make such test upon such a journey. In this case the servant had not gone out solely upon the business of his master and incident to that business had deviated from his way. The primary purpose of the journey was for the business or pleasure, or both, of the servant, and the use of his master’s vehicle was but an incident of the servant’s errand. It seems to me that the return was as much a part of the errand, so far as the use of the ear was concerned, as the going, for the use of the vehicle for the errand required its return to its place of keep. I do not attach importance .to the fact that the casualty occurred after the chauffeur had visited his house and while he was on return to the garage. (See Rayner v. [298]*298Mitchell, L. R. 2 C. P. Div. 357, cited in Lord Halsbury’s Laws of England [vol. 20, p. 253], especially the comments of Lord Coleridge, Ch. J., on page 360.) In that case the driver, while on his return from his errand, had stopped even to bring home certain empty casks for his master.

Even if the servant had generally the right to test the car after repair, I think that the case falls within the principle stated in Shearman and Redfield on Negligence (6th ed.

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Bluebook (online)
172 A.D. 294, 158 N.Y.S. 388, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoenherr-v-hartfield-nyappdiv-1916.