Wissner v. Hartmann

206 A.D. 1, 200 N.Y.S. 408, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7133
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 22, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 206 A.D. 1 (Wissner v. Hartmann) 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
Wissner v. Hartmann, 206 A.D. 1, 200 N.Y.S. 408, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7133 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Kelly, P. J.:

The complaint alleges that on March 27, 1922, the defendant rented to one Anna Brockner a coach drawn by two horses driven by defendant, his agent, servant or employee, to carry said Anna Brockner and such persons as she might invite to accompany her, from 159 Prospect avenue, borough of Queens, to Mount Olivet Cemetery in said borough, and from said cemetery to return to the Prospect avenue address; that plaintiff on the invitation of said Anna Brockner entered the coach and was carried therein from the Prospect avenue address to the cemetery, and that while re-entering the coach at the cemetery for the return trip, she was injured through the negligence of the driver who started the coach suddenly with a violent jerk, throwing plaintiff to the ground.

The answer is substantially a general denial with a separate defense charging plaintiff with contributory negligence.

At the trial the complaint was amended so as to allege a renting of the coach horses and driver by defendant to carry the relatives, friends and invited guests at the funeral of one Ferdinand Brockner to the cemetery and back, instead of the original allegation that the renting was to Anna Brockner, and also to allege that Anna Brockner, who was the widow of deceased, had charge of the funeral arrangements, and that plaintiff at her invitation became the guest at said funeral.”

There is no dispute that on the evidence a question of fact was presented as to whether the plaintiff’s injuries were due to the negligence of the coach driver. Plaintiff testified that as she was entering the coach for the return trip the driver was off the box or driver’s seat and was standing on the ground near the coach door. The horses, uncontrolled, suddenly bolted and plaintiff was thrown to the ground.

The coach and the horses were the property of the defendant, who was engaged in the business of renting out coaches for funerals. He hired and paid the drivers, including the driver of the coach in question; he, alone, had the right to discharge them, and their duty was to drive coaches to funerals. On this particular day one Baque, the undertaker who had charge of the funeral, hired seven coaches and a hearse from defendant for the funeral to Mount Olivet Cemetery. Defendant, called as a witness for plaintiff, testified that he instructed the driver to report to Baque [3]*3and go wherever Baque told him. While the undertaker testified that he told defendant that he wanted the hearse and coaches to go to Mount Olivet Cemetery and while defendant testified on the direct that he rented the coaches to go to Mount Olivet Cemetery, on his cross-examination (by his own counsel) he sai«"' he did not understand the preceding question and that as matter of fact he did not know in advance to what cemetery the coaches were going. He charged the undertaker seven dollars for each coach, from which he allowed a rebate of ten per cent for the undertaker’s service in getting him the business.

The driver of the coach testified that he reported to the undertaker who directed him to go to the funeral house where he took on the mourners including plaintiff and followed the hearse to Mount Olivet Cemetery. After the interment he was told by the undertaker to take the occupants of the coach to a restaurant for refreshments, which he accordingly did, and all of them entered the restaurant, where they had something to eat. After leaving the restaurant he drove the passengers home and then went with the coach and horses to defendant’s stable. The accident to plaintiff occurred as she was entering the coach at the restaurant for the home journey.

The undertaker, Baque, testified that after the interment, after coming out of the cemetery, the party went on Metropolitan avenue to the restaurant which was opposite Lutheran Cemetery. He said that the restaurant was about a mile further along the road away from home. Mount Olivet Cemetery adjoins Lutheran Cemetery. When the interment was completed the widow said to the undertaker that she did not want the mourners to start back home without having something to eat, and she suggested going to the restaurant opposite Lutheran Cemetery as the only place where they could be served. The driver of the coach testified that all of the cemeteries were about the same place, all in the same circle. The plaintiff endeavored to prove by the undertaker that it was the custom to stop for refreshments after the burial, but upon defendant’s objection the learned trial justice said that the custom was immaterial, “ If they did it, that is all that was necessary.”

At the end of plaintiff’s case the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint, and the learned trial justice said: The evidence shows here that this defendant, who was a livery stable keeper, hired his coaches to Baque, who is an undertaker, under an agreement by which Baque was to pay a consideration to the defendant; the defendant directed lfis coaches to report to Baque’s undertaking establishment; the defendant did not know [4]*4the name of the persons who were to be served; in fact he did not know, and it was little of his concern, from what house the body was to be taken to the cemetery or what passengers rode in his coach; so that after the coaches arrived at Baque's place of business they were under the complete control of Baque, in that he directed the course where they were to go. It is true he had no power to discharge the drivers, but he did have sole control in the sense of directing them where they must go. After arriving at the cemetery the driver of the carriage which injured this woman was, with others, directed to go to a place for refreshments, that place being out of the direction of their home, that is, the livery stable of this defendant; so that when these drivers went to that place they not only digressed but they really abandoned — had they been in the employ for the time being of this defendant — they abandoned his service; so that upon two theories here it seems to me the plaintiff hasn't made out a case, first, that the man for the time being was not in the employ of Hartmann, but was in the employ of Baque; second, if it be held he was in the employ of Hartmann there was an abandonment of the work amounting to more than a digression. He abandoned his idea of going home for the time being, which was his duty, and went to a restaurant. So I will have to dismiss this complaint. Mr. Higgins: I except to your Honor’s ruling.”

I am forced to disagree with the learned trial justice on both propositions. I think the driver of the coach was in the employment of the defendant at the time of the accident, and I think it was error to decide as matter of law that the visit to the restaurant was an abandonment of the contract between Hartmann and the undertaker.

Upon the first point, it seems to me, the case is within the principle of Schmedes v. Deffaa (214 N. Y. 675), where the Court of Appeals reversed this court, in the First Department, upon the dissenting opinion of Miller, J., concurred in by Laughlin, J. (153 App. Div. 819). The Schmedes case has been frequently cited. The facts were similar to the case at bar, except that the undertaker in that case ordered the coaches from Deffaa, the defendant. Deffaa did not have sufficient coaches to fill the order and thereupon hired them from another liveryman. He sent his own coaches and drivers together with those hired from the second liveryman to the undertaker. The undertaker gave the necessary directions to all of the coach drivers.

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Bluebook (online)
206 A.D. 1, 200 N.Y.S. 408, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wissner-v-hartmann-nyappdiv-1923.