Vargas Vargas v. Belthor Cáceres Corp.

90 P.R. 36
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 10, 1964
DocketNo. R-62-190
StatusPublished

This text of 90 P.R. 36 (Vargas Vargas v. Belthor Cáceres Corp.) 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
Vargas Vargas v. Belthor Cáceres Corp., 90 P.R. 36 (prsupreme 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Santana Becerra

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action for damages sustained in an automobile accident. In the amended complaint it was alleged that on June 27, 1961, the plaintiff minor was traveling in a 1961 Volkswagen delivery wagon owned by defendant Belthor Cáceres Corporation and operated by Roberto Torres Torres; that as a result of the latter’s negligence the vehicle crashed into a tree and the minor sustained injuries; that when the accident occurred Roberto Torres Torres was discharging his duties as employee of Belthor Cáceres Corporation and the injured minor was performing functions for the benefit of this corporation; and that codefendant U.S. Fire Insurance Co. was the insurer of the automobile described and the policy covered accidents such as the one which occurred herein.

Defendants admitted in the answer that on June 27,1961, plaintiff minor was traveling in the said vehicle operated by Roberto Torres Torres; that when the accident occurred the latter was acting in the course of his duties as employee of Belthor Cáceres Corporation, and admitted that defendant U.S. Fire Insurance Co. was the insurer of that vehicle and that the policy covered accidents of this nature. They denied that the operator was negligent and that the minor was performing functions for the benefit of the corporation.

The uncontroverted evidence appearing on record shows that Torres had been employed by the corporation for about two months prior to the accident. That his work consisted in selling merchandise and delivering the same to the customer immediately, for which purpose he carried the merchandise in the vehicle. Approximately one or one and one-half months prior to the accident, Torres used to take plaintiff minor along with him every day to help him with his [39]*39work. The help consisted in staying in the wagon watching the merchandise while Torres upon arriving at a store left the vehicle in order to make a note with his customer of the articles desired. After that the minor delivered the articles purchased to the customer. Torres paid the minor for this work from his own money. That day, as they drew near Patillas, Torres turned on a curve which was round like a half moon on its left-hand side at about 35 to 40 miles per hour. All of a sudden a bus appeared from the opposite direction, the driver “had to swerve to the right and they collided.” As a result the minor sustained several small cuts on his face with the glass and also, according to the description made by the trial court for the record, he had a scar on the right eyebrow extending upward about one and one-fourth or one and one-half inches long which was clearly perceptible, his face having been marred by that scar. “Other scars on the left side of the forehead which extend downward from the place where the hair grows out, which are also visible. It [sic] is about one inch long.” The minor was treated in the hospital of Patillas where they took 13 stitches, but he was not hospitalized.

The record shows that on several occasions, at the end of the day’s work, Torres used to drive the minor to the premises of the corporation where the merchandise was kept, rendered accounts and then took him home. Also, that some times the minor went for Torres to the premises of the company at the commencement of work and there he got on the wagon. No one called the minor’s attention because of his presence in the vehicle, although the record shows that the executives of the corporation were never in contact with him and only learned of his activities after the accident. The corporation offered oral evidence in the sense that the salesmen and Torres had instructions not to permit passengers [40]*40to ride in the vehicle, not to have assistants and to report every afternoon to the office.1

In its findings of fact the trial court did not make any specific determination as to whether or not Torres had been negligent. In its conclusions of law it dismissed the complaint. It considered that Torres lacked express or implied authorization to invite or permit plaintiff to ride in his employer’s vehicle; that this had been expressly prohibited to him; that “Where the operator of a vehicle, without his employer’s authorization and against the latter’s express orders, invites another person to ride with him and as a result of an accident sustained by the vehicle the invitee is injuréd, the owner is not liable. Martínez v. U.S. Casualty Co., 79 P.R.R. 561, 567; Rivera v. Maldonado, 72 P.R.R. 448; 5 Blashfield, Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice 311, § 3016 (perm, ed.)”; and that this doctrine applies equally in the case of persons whom the employee asks to help him in his tasks or work. Under such circumstances, the employer in this case was not liable for the damages sustained by plaintiff and dismissed the action.2

It seems, under the circumstances of the case, that the ruling in Martínez v. U. S. Casualty Co., cited by the trial court, is no bar to this cause of action. Precisely in Martínez, in which the driver of a municipal ambulance was authorized to transport a sick woman from the house to the hospital and afterwards transported her husband to a drugstore to [41]*41get the medicine prescribed, and in the course of this function caused his death as a result of a collision, we held, citing from González v. Cía. Agrícola, 76 P.R.R. 373 (1954), that “the essential point is to determine whether the agent’s intention in performing such act, or at the time of the accident, was to serve and protect the interests of his employment and not his own interest, arid whether the action is incidental to an authorized act, that is, where there is a reasonable and pertinent relation between the agent’s act and the principal’s purposes, and whether the agent’s act tends reasonably to carry out the ultimate objective of the principal.” In Martinez it was held that the action of the driver had a reasonable and pertinent relation to the interests of the municipality, since it tended to carry out the ultimate objective of the municipality which is to provide the best public-charity service to the community.

And in Rivera v. Maldonado, the other case cited by the trial court, we said citing Acosta v. Crespo, 70 P.R.R. 223 (1949) (p. 451) : “. . . If a pedestrian had been hit by the car while the chauffeur was driving it on such an errand, he could recover damages. But if the chauffeur takes along as his own guest someone whom he does not need to assist him to accomplish his errand, the owner is not liable for injuries to the guest caused by the chauffeur’s negligence in operating the car.” (Italics ours.) In this case the driver, employee of an enterprise, invited and permitted in the vehicle a person who died as a result of injuries sustained through the driver’s negligence. After making an analysis on the doctrines involved, we said at p. 455: “The difficulty in applying the exception to the general rule in Puerto Rico is that we would be extending the limits of § 1803, which only renders liable the owner of an enterprise for the negligent acts of his employees ‘on account of his duties’ to those personal acts of the employee — here the chauffeur’s invitation [42]*42to Juan Rivera to get in the truck — as if said personal acts formed part of the duties which the employee has to discharge in the course of his employment.

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90 P.R. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vargas-vargas-v-belthor-caceres-corp-prsupreme-1964.