Schaff v. Claxton
Decision Date | 24 July 1944 |
Docket Number | No. 8620.,8620. |
Citation | 79 US App. DC 207,144 F.2d 532 |
Parties | SCHAFF et al. v. R. W. CLAXTON, Inc. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — District of Columbia Circuit |
Mr. Caesar L. Aiello, of Washington, D. C., with whom Mr. Llewellyn C. Thomas, of Washington, D. C., was on the brief, for appellants.
Mr. James M. Earnest, of Washington, D. C., with whom Messrs. W. Gwynn Gardiner and Louis M. Denit, both of Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellee.
Before GRONER, Chief Justice, and MILLER and EDGERTON, Associate Justices.
This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment for the defendant, upon a directed verdict, in a suit for personal injuries.
The complaint alleged that appellants were injured by the negligent operation of appellee's truck by his agent. The only negligence alleged in the complaint was in the actual driving of the truck at the time of the accident. But the evidence showed that appellee's driver left the truck, with the keys in it, in the parking space beside a restaurant to which he was delivering goods for appellee, and that employees of the restaurant drove off in the truck and injured appellants.
Squires v. Brooks1 held that the intervening act of a third person who helps himself to a car protects the driver who left the keys in the car from responsibility for a resulting accident. But the recent case of Ross v. Hartman2 overruled the Squires case. It is true that the Ross case involved the violation of an ordinance against leaving an unlocked car in a "public place,"3 and we do not think that a restaurant's private parking space is a "public space" within the meaning of the ordinance. But we said in the Ross case: "In the absence of an ordinance * * * leaving a car unlocked might not be negligent in some circumstances, although in other circumstances it might be both negligent and a legal or `proximate' cause of a resulting accident."4 Under that ruling, the evidence in the present case should have been submitted to the jury with instructions to find for the plaintiffs if they found that the defendant's driver was negligent in leaving the car unlocked and that this negligence was a proximate cause of the accident.5
Appellee contends that the issues on appeal should be confined to those which were duly presented at the trial. This of course is commonly true. But this suit was tried before the Ross case had overruled the Squires case. Therefore appellant did not have a fair chance to raise and press at the trial, nor the court to pass upon, the point concerning the keys. 6 "On the appeal * * * the case should...
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