Tommassen v. Feeley
Tommassen v. Feeley
Opinion of the Court
On November 3, 1940, the plaintiffs, husband and wife, while riding in Weymouth in an automobile operated by the husband, were hurt in a collision with an automobile operated by one Lind. Each plaintiff sued the defendant Feeley to recover for bodily injury, alleging negligence in one count and a violation of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 90, § 12, in another. That section provides in part that “No person shall allow a motor vehicle . . . under his control to be operated by any person who has no legal right so to do.” The male plaintiff claimed also in other counts damages for injury to his automobile and consequential damages arising out of the injury to his wife, and based his claims upon negligence and also upon a violation of the statute cited.
The jury returned a separate verdict against the defendant upon each count. The defendant excepted to the denial of his motions for a directed verdict in his favor upon each count. He contends that he had no such relation to the operation of the automobile by Lind as to make him liable.
The material evidence came from the defendant, a Mrs. McCarthy, and Lind. All were called by the plaintiffs. From their testimony the following facts could be found. On Saturday, November 2, 1940, Lind and the defendant visited one Packard, a dealer in automobiles at Brockton, from whom Lind wished to buy an automobile. Finding no satisfactory one, Lind asked Packard for the use of an automobile on the following day, Sunday, November 3, 1940. Lind told Packard that he had no license to operate one, but that the defendant had such a license. Packard let the defendant, and not Lind, take an automobile for use on the following day, warning both that Lind must not operate it.
On the following day, the defendant, his mother and his sister, Lind and Mrs. McCarthy, with whom Lind was
The defendant testified that he intended to leave the automobile in the driveway for a few minutes only while he went to the bathroom, and intended then to drive Lind and Mrs. McCarthy to her house or wherever they wished to go. The defendant was in the bathroom when Lind drove away, and knew the fact only because his mother told him. He testified that he did not give permission to Lind to drive the automobile, and that Lind’s act in taking it was contrary to his wish and expectation.
The plaintiffs rely upon some fragments of evidence to show that the defendant allowed Lind to take the automobile. The defendant testified that “the reason he got out [of the automobile] was because he saw Mrs. McCarthy approaching to enter [it].” But that may have meant merely that he saw that Mrs. McCarthy was ready to go home, and hastened to the bathroom in order to be ready to- drive her home. His leaving the engine key in the lock did not indicate that Lind, rather than himself, was to drive her. home. Although Lind remained in the automobile for the purpose of driving her home, there was no evidence that
We are of opinion that the evidence did not warrant a finding that the defendant did “allow” the automobile to be operated by Lind, in violation of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 90, § 12. In the cases relied on by the plaintiffs, the evidence of consent was much stronger. McDonough v. Vozzela, 247 Mass. 552. Gordon v. Bedard, 265 Mass. 408. Leblanc v. Pierce Motor Co. 307 Mass. 535, 537, 538. See also Foley v. John H. Bates Inc. 295 Mass. 557, 563, 564. Much less did the evidence warrant a finding, possibly required for recovery on some of the counts, that Lind was the servant of the defendant in taking Mrs. McCarthy home, as in Campbell v. Arnold, 219 Mass. 160; to say nothing of the fact that at the time of the collision Lind had departed from the business of taking her home. The motions of the defendant should have been granted. In each case the entry will be
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Tegnander Tommassen v. Daniel Feeley (and a companion case)
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published