State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Duran

601 P.2d 722, 93 N.M. 489
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 28, 1979
Docket3678
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 601 P.2d 722 (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Duran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Duran, 601 P.2d 722, 93 N.M. 489 (N.M. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

OPINION

WALTERS, Judge.

Plaintiff’s insurance company and its insured sought subrogation recovery against Frank Duran, owner, and his brother Joe Duran, driver, for damages to Chavez’s car and personal injuries sustained by the Chavezes in an automobile accident. Following a non-jury trial, judgment of $4,022.63 was entered against Frank Duran.

Appellant raises two points for reversal: (1) the trial court erred in concluding that appellant was negligent; and (2) the court erred in concluding that appellant was liable for the negligence of his brother based upon the Family Purpose Doctrine.

Application of the Family Purpose Doctrine upon the court’s findings of negligence in this case presents matters of first impression and requires a summary of the facts.

Joe Duran, 56 or 57 years old, lived “off and on” with his brother Frank, 49, and was at his home “sometimes.” Frank testified that Joe “stays with a friend over in Los Lunas, . . . and then [with another friend] . . . he’s away; he comes and goes. I can’t keep track of him.” On the day of the accident, Frank and Joe left Frank’s home where they had been drinking and went in Frank’s car to a neighborhood bar. Both brothers became drunk. Frank spilled a can of beer at the bar and was asked to leave. Joe was playing pool at the time and wanted to finish his game, so Frank left the bar and fell asleep in the back seat of his car while he waited for Joe. When Joe came out, he removed the car keys from the sleeping man’s pocket and while driving Frank’s car, ran a red light and collided with the Chavez car.

Joe Duran’s driver’s license had been permanently suspended, and Frank Duran had never allowed his brother to drive his car. He did not give Joe permission to drive, or his keys, on the date of the accident.

The critical findings and conclusion upon which judgment was grounded are:

(Finding 10): That the proximate cause of the injury and damage sustained by the plaintiff and members of the plaintiff’s family was the negligence of Joe L. Duran and Frank Duran.
(Finding 11): That in addition to his own negligence, Frank Duran is responsible for the negligence of Joe L. Duran as members and residents of the same household and is liable for all of the plaintiff’s damages and the damages to the plaintiff’s family.
(Conclusion 6): That Frank Duran is also liable for the negligence of Joe L. Duran, pursuant to the Family Purpose Doctrine.

Appellant attacks Finding 10 as unsupported by the evidence, and insofar as Frank Duran’s causal negligence is concerned, we agree. The issue of the owner’s negligence in circumstances of vehicular “theft” must be governed by the analogous law of Bouldin v. Sategna, 71 N.M. 329, 378 P.2d 370 (1963). There the owner, in violation of statute, left his car unattended without removing the keys. Our Supreme Court held that he could not have anticipated that the ear would be stolen nor reasonably have foreseen that theft and a subsequent accident would be “a natural or probable result” of leaving the car unlocked with the keys in the ignition. If the susceptibility of the vehicle to theft and the intervening negligence of the thief in Bouldin could not be foreseen under the circumstances present there, they are certainly less foreseeable in this case where the owner retained the keys on his person and remained in the car.

The proximate cause of the injury and damage to plaintiffs was Joe Duran’s unforeseeable intervening negligence. Bouldin, supra.

Holding that Frank Duran was not causally negligent, however, does not relieve him of liability if the Family Purpose Doctrine applies. “The maintenance of the vehicle ‘ * * * for the general use and convenience of [the] family * * *’ is essential to liability under the doctrine.” (Our emphasis.) Peters v. LeDoux, 83 N.M. 307, 491 P.2d 524 (1971). Such evidence is totally lacking in the instant case. There is nothing at all in the record to suggest that the vehicle was for anyone’s use and convenience other than Frank’s.

The Family Purpose Doctrine is grounded on principal-agent, master-servant principles. Pavlos v. Albuquerque Natl. Bank, 82 N.M. 759, 487 P.2d 187 (Ct.App. 1971); Burkhart v. Corn, 59 N.M. 343, 284 P.2d 226 (1955); Boes v. Howell, 24 N.M. 142, 173 P. 966 (1918). It is positioned in the Civil U.J.I. volume under “Chapter 4. Agency, Master and Servant.” See U.J.I. 4.9.

The New Mexico master-servant cases resolve liability of the master upon the scope of the servant’s authority. Where there was no authority, even though the opportunity for abuse was present by reason of the master’s making the opportunity available, the master has been held not liable. Fernandez v. Lloyd McKee Motors, Inc., 90 N.M. 433, 564 P.2d 997 (Ct.App.1977); Morris v. Cartwright, 57 N.M. 328, 258 P.2d 719 (1953); Miller v. Hoefgen, 51 N.M. 319, 183 P.2d 850 (1947).

Prior to adoption of the Rules of Evidence for the courts of New Mexico in 1973, any presumption of consensual agency in the driver when the owner was also present in the vehicle was rebutted when evidence to the contrary was presented. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co. v. Foundation Reserve Ins. Co., 78 N.M. 359, 431 P.2d 737 (Ct.App.1967). Frank Duran denied granting consent, and that testimony was uneontradicted.

Likewise, it was held that any presumption of consent to the driver and thus agency in the driver, by proof of ownership in the defendant, “ceases to exist immediately upon the introduction of credible and substantial evidence which would support a contrary finding.” Payne v. Tuozzoli, 80 N.M. 214, 453 P.2d 384 (Ct.App.1969); Morris v. Cartwright, supra. Silva v. Traver, 63 Ariz. 364, 162 P.2d 615 (1945), was cited in Morris, supra, for the proposition that “[w]henever evidence contradicting a legal presumption is introduced the presumption vanishes.” At 57 N.M. 332-333, 258 P.2d 722, Morris addressed the fragile effect of the presumption that the driver’s agency attached to proof of the defendant’s ownership,, and noted:

It must be conceded that proof or admission of ownership creates a presumption that the driver of a vehicle causing damages is the servant of the owner and using the vehicle in the master’s business, and this presumption is sufficient in the absence of evidence to the contrary to support a verdict. But it is only a presumption of law and not evidence. When contradictory evidence is introduced, the presumption disappears as though it had never existed.

The law of New Mexico was observed to be the same as that quoted, in Morris, at 57 N.M. 333-334, 258 P.2d 723, from Gallagher v.

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State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Duran
601 P.2d 722 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1979)

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601 P.2d 722, 93 N.M. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-v-duran-nmctapp-1979.