The plaintiff has recovered damages suffered through injuries to his infant son resulting, as alleged, from the negligence of one Paretti, the driver of the truck which collided with a bicycle ridden by the infant. The main question involved in the appeal is whether or not the defendant is responsible
Cases such as these present the somewhat difficult question whether one in the general employment of one person is, with respect to a particular transaction, the servant of another. There are numerous authorities pro and con upon the subject, but all to the effect that to render a defendant liable the actual control and dominion over'the servant must have been surrendered by the regular employer and assumed by the person in whose business he is engaged at the time of the accident. The case at bar we think, in principle, is not unlike Kellogg v. Church Charity Foundation, 203 N. Y. 191; Weaver v. Jackson, 153 App. Div. 661; Vasligato v. Yellow Pine Co., 158 id. 551.
In the Kellogg case the defendant owned, controlled and managed a hospital, and in connection therewith owned and used an ambulance. As occasion arose for
In the present case there is not the slightest claim that Williams interfered in any way with Paretti’s management of the truck in question. True, he directed Paretti when and where to make deliveries, but not how to manage or control his horse and truck, or the way to reach his destination.
In Weaver v. Jackson, supra, an action for personal injuries sustained by the fall of a heavy case of goods, caused by the negligence of the driver of a truck, in permitting it to start away from a platform, it appeared that plaintiff’s master, one Sternau & Co., had the exclusive use of the horse and truck which was furnished by defendants at a fixed rate per week, under an agreement that defendants should assume responsibility from the time the goods were delivered to them until they were delivered at their destination. The defendants employed and paid the driver, whom they selected and had the right to discharge. The plaintiff’s master did not interfere in any way with
In Vasligato v. Yellow Pine Co., supra, it appeared that when defendant had to make large deliveries of lumber it engaged extra horses and drivers from a public truckman, one McAllister. While driving a lumber truck owned and used by defendant, but driven by a driver furnished by McAllister, it ran over plaintiff. This driver received his wages from McAllister. On the morning of the accident the defendant had reported at the McAllister stables, where he took his orders for the day. He was to harness his horses, go with them to defendant’s lumber yard and drive out defendant’s loaded trucks as defendant directed. At the yard the driver was given the destination of his load and he proceeded to make deliveries without being accompanied by any representative of defendant. At the end of the month defendant paid McAllister at the rate of seven dollars a day for the horses and driver. Defendant could not select, engage
In the present case Paretti was selected, employed and paid by Assiro, who alone could discharge him. This, in our opinion, in view of the authorities cited, made him the servant of Assiro and not of Williams.
The respondent calls to our attention and relies upon Higgins v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 156 N. Y. 75, and Howard v. Ludwig, 171 id. 507, for a sustention of the judgment herein, but those authorities are clearly distinguishable from the facts herein. In the Higgins case a building owned by defendant had been damaged and a contractor was engaged in repairing and restoring it, and, among other things, was to furnish elevators and they were then in his control and use. He needed a man to assist him in operating one of the elevators and obtained from defendant one Algar for that purpose, whose negligent operation of the elevator was responsible for the accident. The distinguishing feature in that case is that the contractor had control of the elevator. It was his property and it was he who gave orders to Algar.
Howard v. Ludwig was decided by the Court of Appeals in 1902 by a closely divided court and is well distinguished by Mr. Justice Scott in Weaver v. Jackson, supra.
Weeks, J., concurs; Lehman, J., dissents.
Judgment reversed, with thirty dollars costs.