Higham v. T.W. Waterman Company
Higham v. T.W. Waterman Company
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of the case for negligence brought by Clifton W. Higham, p. a. against T. W. Waterman Company, to recover for personal injuries sustained on the 17th day of June, A.- D. 1909, in consequence of lumber piled upon a public highway, falling upon him.
Burrows and Kenyon, incorporated, is a corporation engaged in the lumber business in the city of Providence. Said corporation does not have teams of its own with which to deliver lumber to its customers. It hires from various persons horses arid lumber wagons, and drivers to drive the teams and attend to the delivery of lumber sold by it to its customers. Among others it has a verbal contract with the defendant, T. W. Waterman Company, which carries on a general teaming business, to furnish to it, upon request, teams with drivers at a certain price per hour. On June 17th 1909, upon request, the defendant under said contract furnished to Burrows and Kenyon, incorporated, a double team and driver. Burrows and Kenyon directed said driver to make delivery of a load of hemlock boards at . a place where a new house was being erected on Alverson Avenue in said Providence. Said driver was not accompanied by any employee or agent of Burrows and Kenyon, or by any assistant. All that the testimony clearly shows in regard to the driver’s conduct in carrying out the direction to deliver said boards is that he took them from his lumber reach and piled them up in the highway, upon the edge of the sidewalk, beside the gutter, in front of the lot, where said house was being erected. Within a short time after the driver had piled them up and left them, the boards or some portion of them fell over into the gutter and injured the plaintiff, a boy seven years old, who was picking up chips of wood there. According to the testimony of certain of the wit *580 nesses the pile of boards was not disturbed by any person from the time it was left by said driver until it fell over upon the plaintiff.
The case was tried in the Superior Court before a jury. At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, on motion of the defendant, the justice presiding nonsuited the plaintiff on the ground that said driver, in piling the load of boards upon the sidewalk in Alverson Avenue, was the servant of Burrows and Kenyon, incorporated, and that the T. W. Waterman Company was not liable for any negligence of said driver in that regard.
The case is before this court upon the plaintiff’s exceptions to the rulings of the justice presiding excluding certain testimony and granting the defendant’s motion for a non-suit.
The principal exception of the plaintiff is to the ruling of the justice granting the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit. It has been suggested that whatever may be determined as to the particular ground upon which the justice based his ruling, the nonsuit was proper, because the testimony shows that there was a delivery of the lumber to the customer of Burrows and Kenyon and that the legal effect of such a delivery would be to exonerate the master of the driver, whichever of these two companies it may be, from liability arising from the fall of the lumber upon the plaintiff.
The only testimony which we have in the case regarding the terms of the contract between Burrows and Kenyon and the defendant is that of Edwin O. Chase, the treasurer of *585 Burrows and Kenyon, who testified as follows: “Q. 6. Do you know under what terms the T. W. Waterman Company were carting lumber for you on the 17th of June, 1909? A. Yes, sir; the team was carting by the hour. Q. 7. Did you have any control of the teamer? A. Not other than to give them directions, where to deliver the goods. Q. 8. Did you have any power to discharge him, or anything of that sort? A. No, sir. Q. 9. And if he did not do the work properly, what would you do? A. I would send him back to Mr. Waterman. Q. 10.. Did you have any more control of him than of any expressman that you might hire? A. No, sir. Q. 11. Did you have the same control over him that you did of your own men? A. No, sir. Q. 12. All that you had to do was to give him directions where to go? A. Yes, sir.” This testimony shows that the contract was the ordinary one usually made with a teaming company and the control which Burrows and Kenyon had over this driver was the same as that which a person exercises over the driver of the carriage in which he rides, when he hires a carriage and horses with a driver from a livery stable, or which a person has over the driver of a moving van sent by a teaming company upon a contract to move household goods. There is- necessarily a certain amount of information, instruction and direction which the hirer must give to the driver, as he would be obliged to give the principal if he had come himself instead of sending his servant. In such circumstances the weight of authority supports the plaintiff's claim that the driver continues the servant of the defendant who is liable for any negligence of the driver in unloading and piling the lumber.
In Morris v. Trudo, 74 Atl. 387, the city of Virgennes was carrying on work on its streets under the superintendence of one Lavalley. Lavalley hired of the defendant a double team with a driver. By the terms of the hiring the driver was to do with the team whatever work he was set to do by Lavalley — whether moving stones or using a scraper or drawing gravel. In the drawing of gravel, it was for Lavalley *586 to direct where the gravel should be taken from, where it should be unloaded, and how it should be placed. At the time of the accident, the plaintiff, by direction of Lavalley, was assisting the driver in shoveling out a load of gravel. The court said: "One to whom the servant of another is temporarily lent or hired, has for the time being the responsibilities of a master in so far, and only in so far, as- he may exercise the authority of a master. . . . The testimony tends to show that in respect to the driving of the team the defendant committed nothing to the city or its superintendent. . . , The doctrine ,of respondeat superior fastens liability upon the defendant, since the negligent wrongdoing inhered in a thing in respect to which the relation of master and servant between him and the driver had never been suspended. ... If the contract had been such that Lavalley might have put a driver of his own choosing in charge of the team, and have put the driver furnished at some other work, the defendant would be held to have relinquished the rights of a master, and to have been freed from responsibilities as such in all respects. Such a contract, however, the evidence does not show.”
In Quinn v. Electric Construction Company, 46 Fed. 506, the court said: "Pursuant to a contract by which the defendant was to furnish the Western Electric Company with a horse, truck and driver daily to do its trucking work for a specified period at a specified price, the defendant each day selected from its men and equipment the horse, truck and driver which were to be at the disposition of the Western Electric Company, and on- the day the plaintiff was injured had sent Murphy with the horse and truck, which he was driving at the time. Murphy had taken a load óf goods for the Western Electric Company and was returning to its factory, when he ran over the plaintiff. Under the circumstances, although the Western Electric Company was the primary employer for whom the service which Murphy was engaged in was being rendered, the defendant was Murphy’s immediate superior. It had hired him, and could discharge *587 or retain him, and thus had the selection and control of the means of accomplishing the object of the contract which had been made between the Western Electric Company and itself. The defendant was not the servant or agent of the Western Electric Company, but was an independent contractor; hence those employed by the defendant to do the work contracted for were its servants, and not those of the Western Electric Company.”
“The rule of respondeat superior rests on the power which the superior has a right to exercise, and which, for the protection of third persons, he is bound to exercise, over the acts of his subordinates. It does not apply to cases where the power of control does not exist, and the power does not exist when the primary employer has no voice in the selection or retention of the subordinate.”
In Stewart v. California Improvement Co., 131 Cal. 125, the court after reviewing the authorities said: “The test in all these cases is, who conducts and supervises the particular work, the doing of which or the careless and negligent doing of which, causes the injury?”
See also Quarman v. Burnett, 6 M. & W. 499; Waldock v. Winfield, 2 K. B. (1901) 596; Consolidated Plate Glass Co. v. Caston, 29 Can. Sup. Ct. 624; Singer v. McDermott, 30 Misc. 738; Murray v. Dwight, 161 N. Y. 301; Huff v. Ford, 126 Mass. 24; Jones v. Mayor, 14 Q. B. D. 890.
The plaintiff’s exceptions are sustained. Case is remitted to the Superior Court for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Clifton W. Higham, P. A. vs. T. W. Waterman Company
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