Hudgens v. Boles

Plaintiff's (appellee's) automobile was damaged by collision with defendant's automobile on a public highway. A jury found that the negligence of the driver of defendant's machine was the sole proximate cause of the collision and awarded damages accordingly. Defendant urges two propositions for a reversal of the judgment.

In the first place, he says plaintiff was a trespasser upon the public highway with his machine and not entitled to maintain this action for damage done to it for the reason that he had not paid the license tax provided by schedule 6 of section 361 of the revenue act approved September 15, 1919 (Acts 1919, p. 397), and section 367 of the same act makes it a misdemeanor to do any act for which a license is required by law without first having taken out a license. As to this contention it needs only to be said that in all proceedings under the act, including, specifically, criminal proceedings against delinquent taxpayers, the statute (section 366 of the act) provides that license taxes, due October 1st, shall not be delinquent before the 1st of November of each year. The collision of which plaintiff complained occurred October 19th, so that at the time plaintiff had not incurred any of the disabilities attached to delinquency. See, also, B. R., L. P. Co. v. Ætna Co., 184 Ala. 601, 64 So. 44; Gilman v. Central Vermont Ry. Co. 93 Vt. 340, 107 A. 122,16 A.L.R. 1108.

In the second place, the court's refusal of the general affirmative charge to defendant is assigned for error. The request for this charge was based upon the proposition that the evidence showed without dispute that defendant's car was being operated by his minor son and without defendant's knowledge of the fact, as it unquestionably did. But there was some evidence sufficing to bring the case within the rule of Erlich v. Heis,193 Ala. 669, 69 So. 530, for that it tended to show that defendant was accustomed to let his wife and daughter have the use of the car and on such occasions the son would drive it for them, or, on the theory that such use of the car was defendant's business, for him. On the occasion in question *Page 68 the son was driving the car for himself and his elder sister, though, as he testified, the trip was "mostly his." The court has thought the decision in Erlich v. Heis was not in conflict with the rulings in Parker v. Wilson, 179 Ala. 361, 60 So. 150, 43 L.R.A. (N.S.) 87, and Armstrong v. Sellers, 182 Ala. 582,62 So. 28, later followed in Gardiner v. Solomon,200 Ala. 115, 75 So. 621, L.R.A. 1917F, 380, and, if it is not, this case was properly submitted to the jury.

Affirmed.

ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.