Tenney v. Verdon
Tenney v. Verdon
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff was a passenger in an automobile owned by the defendant at the time when he was injured because this automobile came into collision with another similar vehicle. The
The evidence shows that at the time of the accident defendant’s son was driving the car, and that besides the plaintiff there were two young women aboard; that this was in the evening. These facts taken alone would justify the argument that although the car belonged to the defendant, the soil was not operating it in any way as his agent, but was engaged in a pleasure ride on his own account, and (hat plaintiff was a participant in that excursion. But there are other facts testified to in the case which throw a very different light upon the situation. II appeared that the defendant luid no hired chauffeur, and that the son did all the family driving and appeared to be charged with the responsibility of keeping the car in good running order and attending to minor repairs. The evidence also tended to show that on this particular evening the commutator of the ear was not functioning properly, and that, as the plaintiff was a friend of the defendant’s son and was by occupation a stationary and marine engineer, and something of a mechanician, the sou appealed to him to correct this trouble with the commutator. According to the evidence, the son went to see the plaintiff about this matter, and the two young men started to diagnose the difficulty with a view of correcting it. The son ran the car while the plaintiff checked up on the commutator, and presently defendant’s son said that while they were working on the car they might as well go and get a Miss J., with whom he had an appointment. The plaintiff did some work on the commutator and then they went down to Miss J.’s house and took Miss J. and her sister aboard, and drove up the Hudson county boulevard to the end of it. Plaintiff filed the commutator points again, ran a little further, stopped and did some more filing, and then they started home, and it was while plaintiff was being taken home
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- FRANK TENNEY, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT v. WILLIAM P. VERDON
- Status
- Published