BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Anderson v. Glasgow Tramway and Omnibus Co., Ltd [1893] ScotLR 31_240 (19 December 1893) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1893/31SLR0240.html Cite as: [1893] SLR 31_240, [1893] ScotLR 31_240 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 240↓
[
A woman who was entering the Glasgow Central Railway Station was injured by a hamper which fell off a passing lorry. She sued the Tramway Company, who were the owners of the lorry, for damages, on the ground that the accident had been caused by the fault of their servant, the driver. The jury returned a verdict for the pursuer. It appeared that at the time of the accident the driver of the lorry was conveying a Post Office official and a
Page: 241↓
load of Post Office parcels to the railway station in terms of a contract between the Tramway Company and the Post Office authorities, whereby the Tramway Company undertook to convey mails and parcels for the Postal authorities to and from the Post Office and the railway station, and to provide for their conveyance a sufficient number of vans and horses under the charge of steady drivers. On this occasion the Post Office official had directed the driver to go to the covered way outside the station, and as the railway employees would not take the parcels there, he had then directed the driver to enter the station. The driver turned his horses round a sharp corner into the carriageway, and one of the wheels of the lorry took the curb, with the result that several hampers fell off, one of which struck the pursuer. There was evidence to the effect that the accident had been caused by the driver taking the corner at too great speed. The defenders applied for a new trial, on the ground of misdirection and that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, in respect that the driver was at the time of the accident under the control and subject to the orders of the Post Office official.
The Court refused to grant a new trial, holding that though the driver was bound to take the parcels where he was directed to go by the Post Office official, he was not subject to the orders and control of that official so as to make the Post Office liable for the consequences of his fault.
On Friday 23rd December 1892 Mrs Anderson, wife of a wine merchant in Glasgow, was entering the Glasgow Central Railway Station by the footpath at the side of the carriageway leading into the station from Gordon Street, when she was struck and severely injured by a hamper which fell from a lorry passing up the carriageway into the station. The lorry and horses belonged to the Tramway Company, and the driver was their servant.
Mrs Anderson brought an action of damages against the Tramway Company, averring that the accident had been caused by the fault of the driver of the lorry.
The defenders in answer averred that at the time of the accident the lorry was loaded with Post Office baskets, that a Post Office official in charge of the baskets was riding on the lorry, and that the driver was subject to the control of that official.
They pleaded that the pursuer had not been injured through the fault of the defenders or those for whom they were responsible.
The case was tried before Lord Low and a jury on 18th July 1893. It appeared from the evidence that the defenders had entered into a contract with the District Surveyor of the General Post Office, acting for the Postmaster-General, whereby they undertook to convey Post Office officials, mails, and parcels to and from the Post Offices, railway stations, and other places in Glasgow, and to supply for their conveyance a sufficient number of vans, carts, and horses, with steady and sober drivers, not being less than eighteen years of age, all as should be respectively approved by the said District Surveyor or his successors. The Tramway Company further bound and obliged themselves to maintain due discipline among the drivers, to ensure that the condition of their clothing should be such as to give satisfaction to the Postmaster-General or his agents, or the District Surveyor, and to provide them with uniform of the regulation pattern. It was further provided that in case the District Surveyor should at any time signify in writing his disapprobation of any of the said conveyances, horses, or drivers, and require the same respectively to be removed or changed, the Tramway Company should, on good cause shown, and would forthwith, after receiving such notice, dismiss any such driver and change any such conveyance or horse, and substitute therefor such other driver, conveyance, or horse as should be approved by the District Surveyor of the General Post Office. The contract also provided that the Tramway Company and all the drivers of the conveyances employed in carrying the mails and parcels should and would faithfully and punctually obey and perform all such rules, orders, and regulations in respect of the carriage of the mails and postmen as should be signified to them under, the hand of the District Surveyor or by the order of the Postmaster-General.
On 23rd December 1892 the driver of a lorry belonging to the defenders took a load of hampers from the Post Office in Glasgow to the Central Railway Station. The driver was accompanied by an official of the Post Office, who was in charge of the hampers, and this official directed the driver to go to the covered way outside the station and draw up there. When the lorry arrived in the covered way the railway servants refused to take the hampers off there, and the Post Office official directed the driver to go inside the station to the platform. The driver turned his horses round a sharp corner into the carriageway, and one of the wheels took the curb, with the result that several of the hampers were thrown off the lorry by the jolt. One of these fell on the pursuer and caused the injuries of which she complained.
The pursuer led evidence to the effect that the driver had taken his horses into the carriageway at a smart trot, that this was too great a speed considering the sharp angle he had to turn, and that his rashness in this respect had caused the accident.
Brannan, the driver, deponed—“I was told by a postman to drive to Central Station, and to stop outside in the covered way. I am under his orders. I went to covered way, and stopped opposite booking-office. The railway people would not take hampers off there, but said we must go on into station. … I then drove on.…
Page: 242↓
Cross-examined—I was walking horses as slowly as I could. … I am quite fit to take lorry round without touching the curb.” Simmie, the Post Office messenger who was in charge of the hampers, deponed—“I was to go to Central Station, and directed driver to go to front entrance. … We went to covered entrance to get un-‘oaded there. … The porter told me to drive inside to the platform, and I told driver to go in. He was under my orders.” …
Evidence was led for the defence to the effect that it was extremely difficult to take a lorry from covered way into carriageway without striking the curb.
The defenders requested Lord Low to direct the jury to the following effect—“That if the jury are of opinion on the evidence that at the time of the accident William Brannan, the driver of the lorry in question, was under the orders of and subject to the control of the Post Office Department, and that the accident happened while the said driver was driving the lorry in question in furtherance of a special order and direction given to him by a Post Office official, the defenders are not liable in law for the fault of the said William Brannan in consequence of his complying with such special order and direction.”
Lord Low refused to give the direction craved, and the defenders excepted to his refusal.
The jury found for the pursuer, and assessed the damages at £500.
The defenders presented a bill of exceptions in respect of Lord Low's refusal to give the direction craved by them. They also moved for a rule on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence. The Court granted a rule.
Argued for the pursuer—A new trial should not be granted. The result of the evidence was to show that the accident had been caused by the driver taking the turn at too great a speed. The relation of master and servant existed between the defenders and the driver of the lorry, and prima facie they were responsible for his fault. There was nothing in the contract or the evidence to show that the control of the driver had been transferred to the officials of the Post Office so as to make that Department responsible. The ordinary rule was that when a person hired a vehicle and driver, he was not liable for the results of the driver's carelessness— Laugher v. Pointer, 5 Barn. & Cres. 547; Quarman v. Burnett, 6 Meeson & Welsby, 499 (Exch. Rep.); Jones v. Corporation of Liverpool, L.R., 12 Q.B.D. 890; Reedie v. London and North-Western Railway Company, 4 Exch. 244; Shields v. Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway Company, July 4, 1856, 18 D. 1199. No doubt the opposite was the case where the servant was placed entirely under the control of the hirer— Rourke v. London, &c., L.R., 2 C.P.D. 205. But that kind of case was distinct from the present, where the vehicle and driver were only let out for a limited purpose— per Justice Manisty in Jones v. Corporation of Liverpool, L.R., 12 Q.B.D. 894. The verdict was therefore not contrary to the evidence, and the direction craved was rightly refused.
Argued for the defenders—The direction asked should have been given, and the verdict was contrary to the evidence. In every case of this kind it was a question of circumstances whether or not the servant had been placed under the control of the hirer so as to make him responsible for the servant's fault. Here the Post Office authorities had under the contract the general control of the drivers of the vehicles supplied for the conveyance of the mails. Each conveyance also was accompanied by a Post Office official, who exercised a special control over the driver, and this was the case with the lorry in question, as the evidence showed. Further, the Post Office authorities had not only the power of insisting on the driver's being dismissed, but the selection of the substitute was practically in their hands. The Post Office Department was therefore responsible for the fault of the driver— Rourke's case supra; Jones v. Burnett, supra; Donovan v. Laing, &c., L.R. 1893, 1 Q.B. 629.
At advising—
The direction asked seems to me to have been too vague and ambiguous to have been else than a misleading direction. Applied as it was to a driving case, it might have led the jury into the error of finding for the defenders on the sole ground that the Post Office official had the right to name the destination to which he desired the lorry driven.
I am therefore for refusing the rule and the bill of exceptions.
Page: 243↓
I think that in a case of this kind where a person hires a horse and van, it is a well-known rule that the hirer will not be involved in responsibility for accidents caused by the hire. I do not see that it makes any difference to the principle whether the hire is for a day or a month, or whether it is or is not in writing. I concur with your Lordship that we should not disturb this verdict.
For the same reasons I think it would have been entirely wrong for the Judge to have charged the jury in the terms in which his Lordship was asked to direct them.
If, however, the accident was caused by Brannan's error in driving, then the question came to be, whether Brannan was or was not the servant of the defenders, so as to make them liable for his fault, and that depends upon the meaning of the contract with the Post Office, for if they had not only hired out their lorry to the Post Office but had also transferred the entire control of their drivers and other servants to the Post Office authorities, then the driver must be held to have become a servant of the Post Office, which would in that case be liable for his acts in the course of his employment. But I concur with your Lordships that that is not the true effect and meaning of the contract between the Tramway Company and the Post Office. In so far as it depends upon the written contract, it seems to be clear enough that what the defenders undertook to do was simply to convey or cause to be conveyed these mails, and to provide the Post Office with a sufficient number of good and substantial vans, brakes, and mail-carts under the charge of steady and sober drivers, not being under eighteen years of age, subject to the approval of the Post Office authorities. Their obligation, in the first place, was to supply the conveyances and drivers, and the contract goes on to provide that the company shall maintain due discipline among the said drivers, and shall be responsible for their clothing and for the horses and harness. That shows that the company were the direct masters of the drivers in “charge of the conveyances in question.” There is a further stipulation in favour of the Post Office authorities, that if they disapprove of any of the conveyances, horses, or drivers, they shall be entitled to require the same to be removed or changed, and that the company shall, on due cause shown, and after due notice, dismiss any such driver. That is not a condition that the Post Office should have control of the drivers at all, but that if any driver acted wrongly, or if they were dissatisfied with any driver, they should complain of him to the company, who upon cause shown that the complaint was justified should dismiss him. It appears to me therefore that there is no ground for saying that the contract of the Tramway Company's servant was transferred from them to the Post Office. Nor was there any evidence before the jury to enable them to come to that conclusion. I think there is only one passage in the evidence upon which an argument to that effect might be founded. But it was for the jury under the direction of the Judge to consider what was the true meaning of that evidence. It appears to me that upon the evidence before them they were justified in holding that at the time of the accident Brannan was the servant of the Tramway Company, and that the error, whatever it
Page: 244↓
The Court disallowed the exception, discharged the rule, and refused to grant a new trial.
Counsel for the Pursuer— Comrie Thomson— Abel. Agents— Gill & Pringle, W.S.
Counsel for the Defenders— Jameson— Wilton. Agent— John Rhind, S.S.C.