SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
Carter v. Reynolds (A-104-01)
Argued November 7, 2002 -- Decided February 19, 2003
LONG, J., writing for the Court
The issue in this appeal is whether the doctrine of
respondeat superior may
be invoked to hold an employer vicariously liable for the tort of an
employee when the employee has an automobile accident on her way home from
an off-site clients location and when she was required by her employer to
use her personal car on mandatory client visits.
Alice Reynolds was a non-professional, part-time employee who conducted detail work for auditors.
At the time of the accident, Reynolds was employed by the accounting firm
of Stevenes, Fluhr, Chismar, Alvino & Schechter, CPA (the firm). She was required
to work in the firms Neptune office, but she spent twenty-five to thirty
percent of her time visiting clients off-site. There was no office car available
to Reynolds, thus, she was required to use her own vehicle for travel.
Reynolds was able to claim mileage and obtain travel reimbursement in accordance with
Internal Revenue Service rates and rules. On the date of the accident, Reynolds
spent the morning in the office and then traveled to Deal to a
client location. Reynolds was on her way home from Deal when she had
an accident with a vehicle driven by David Carter.
Carter filed a Complaint against Reynolds and subsequently amended it to include the
firm, alleging that Reynolds was an employee, servant, and/or agent of the firm
when the accident occurred because she was in the scope of her employment.
The firm filed a motion for summary judgment and Carter filed a cross-motion.
The trial court granted the firms motion, but on reconsideration ruled that Reynolds
was acting within the scope of her employment and granted Carters motion for
partial summary judgment with respect to respondeat superior liability.
The firm moved for leave to appeal. In a published opinion, the Appellate
Division affirmed the trial courts grant of partial summary judgment to Carter, reasoning
that Reynolds was acting within the scope of her employment. The firm moved
for leave to appeal and the Supreme Court granted the motion.
HELD: The firm is liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior because Reynolds
use of her personal automobile to advance her employers business interests fell within
the dual purpose, required-vehicle exception to the going and coming rule and placed
her squarely both within the employment relationship and the scope of her employment
at the time of the accident.
1. Although as a general rule of tort law, liability must be based
on personal fault, the doctrine of respondeat superior recognizes a vicarious liability principle
pursuant to which a master will be held liable in certain cases for
the wrongful acts of his servants or employees. To establish a masters liability
under respondeat superior, a plaintiff must prove (1) that a master-servant relationship existed
and (2) that the tortious act of the servant occurred within the scope
of that employment. (Pp. 6-7)
2 Along with forty-four other states, New Jersey recognizes section 220 of the
Restatement (Second) of Agency as the touchstone for determining who is a servant:
A servant is a person employed to perform services in the affairs of
another and who with respect to the physical conduct in the performance of
the services is subject to the others control or right to control. That
determination is dependent on a number of factual matters set forth in the
Restatement, incorporated into our model jury charge, and such other factors as may
be reasonably considered in determining whether the employer has control or right to
control the person employed. (Pp. 7-9)
3. Proof that the employer-employee relationship exists does not, in and of itself,
create an inference that a given act done by the employee was within
the scope of employment. In New Jersey, an employees conduct falls within the
scope of employment if (a) it is of the kind he is employed
to perform; (b) it occurs substantially within the authorized time and space limits;
and, (c) it is actuated, at least in part, by a purpose to
serve the master. Restatement (Second) § 228. § 229 of the Restatement provides that to
be within the scope of the employment, conduct must be of the same
general nature as that authorized, or incidental to the conduct authorized. The Restatement
sets forth a number of factors that should be considered in determining whether
or not the conduct, although not authorized, is nevertheless so similar to or
incidental to the conduct authorized as to be within the scope of employment.
(Pp. 9-13)
4. Generally, an employee who is going to or coming from his or
her place of employment is not considered to be acting within the scope
of employment. There are, however, exceptions to the going and coming rule. Respondeat
superior has been held to apply to a situation involving commuting when: (1)
the employee is engaged in a special errand or mission on the employers
behalf; (2) the employer requires the employee to drive his or her personal
vehicle to work so that the vehicle may be used for work-related tasks;
and (3) the employee is on-call. In addition, New Jersey has adopted the
dual purpose exception, which covers cases in which, at the time of the
employees negligence, he or she can be said to be serving an interest
of the employer along with a personal interest. (Pp. 13-17)
5. A master-servant relationship plainly existed between Reynolds and the firm. Because Reynolds
spent one-third of her work time on the road visiting firm clients, was
required by the firm to have her own car available for such activities,
and actually was returning from a client visit at the time of the
accident, she came within the required-vehicle exception to the going and coming rule.
Moreover, driving a required vehicle satisfies the control and benefit elements of respondeat
superior. Reynolds was returning home from an off-site visit and therefore had a
dual purpose insofar as she was serving interests of both herself and the
firm. (Pp. 17-20)
6. The Court rejects Carters contention that Reynolds was on a special errand
or mission for the firm when the accident occurred and declines to consider
the broader enterprise liability theory that is the standard for respondeat superior in
California. (Pp. 20-23)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA filed a separate, concurring opinion, in which JUSTICE VERNIERO joins, stating
that the Courts holding does not stand for the proposition that all types
of employees who commute to work by personal vehicle, and who may be
sent, via their own vehicle, on assignment from time to time, now commute
every day to and from their regular workplace under the control of their
employer.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES COLEMAN, ZAZZALI and ALBIN join in Justice LONGs
opinion. JUSTICE LaVECCHIA filed a separate concurring opinion, in which JUSTICE VERNIERO joins.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
104 September Term 2001
DAVID CARTER and DONNA CARTER, husband and wife,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
ALICE F. REYNOLDS,
Defendant,
and
STEVENS, FLUHR, CHISMAR, ALVINO & SCHECHTER, C.P.A.,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued November 7, 2002 Decided February 19, 2003
On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
345 N.J. Super. 67 (2001).
Stephen R. Dumser argued the cause for appellant (Gercke, Dumser, Shoemaker & Sierzega,
attorneys; Mr. Dumser and Ronald P. Sierzega, on the brief).
Alan H. Sklarsky argued the cause for respondents (Tomar O'Brien Kaplan Jacoby &
Graziano, attorneys).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
LONG, J.
In this appeal, we are called on to determine whether the doctrine of
respondeat superior may be invoked to hold an employer vicariously liable for the
tort of an employee. More particularly, we have been asked to decide whether
the automobile negligence of an employee, who was required by her employer to
use her personal car on mandatory client visits, subjected the employer to liability
for an accident when the employee was on her way home from a
clients location. Applying well-established principles of our law, we have concluded that it
does.
I
The facts of the case are detailed in the Appellate Division decision.
Carter
v. Reynolds,
345 N.J. Super. 67 (App. Div. 2001),
leave to appeal granted,
172 N.J. 170 (2002). We repeat only those that are necessary to our
disposition. Defendant Alice Reynolds was the owner and operator of a vehicle that
struck plaintiff, David Carter, on January 15, 1997, in Belmar, New Jersey. At
the time of the accident, Reynolds, who resided in Brielle, New Jersey, was
employed by the accounting firm of Stevens, Fluhr, Chismar, Alvino & Schechter, CPA,
(the firm), located in Neptune, New Jersey.
At the firm, Reynolds was a non-professional, part-time employee who conducted detail work
for auditors. She was responsible for the verification, checking, and preparation of bank
reconciliations. Her job required her to work in the firms Neptune office, and
also to visit clients. Vincent Alvino, a partner in the firm, testified that
Reynolds spent approximately sixty to seventy percent of her time at the firms
Neptune office and twenty-five to thirty percent at client locations. There was no
office car available to Reynolds; thus, she was required to use her own
vehicle for travel, with business mileage reimbursed by the firm under the Internal
Revenue Services (IRS) then prevailing allowance of 31½ cents per mile. With respect
to travel reimbursement, Alvino testified that, in accordance with IRS rules, Reynolds could
claim mileage from the office to the client assignment and from the client
assignment back to the office and in the event that she was traveling
from home, it would be the mileage from her home to the client
or from the office to the client, whichever was closer, and that would
also hold true for
the return trip. If she was traveling from the client back home, she
would get the shorter distance of the mileage from the client to home
or the client to the office.
With respect to billing, on the days Reynolds traveled from her home to
the client, she would begin billing when she arrived at the clients destination.
On the days that she went directly home after meeting with a client,
she would stop billing when she left the client, not when she actually
arrived at home. If she had to return to the office after meeting
with a client, she would bill for her travel time to the firm.
On the day in question, Reynolds spent the morning at the firm, and
then traveled to Deal to a client location. Reynolds spent the remainder of
the day working in Deal. She testified that she was reimbursed for the
mileage from Deal to Neptune, but that she was not paid wages for
her travel time. At approximately 4:29 p.m., when Reynolds was traveling from Deal
to her home, the accident occurred.
On November 3, 1997, Carter filed an automobile negligence action against Reynolds. Later,
Carter filed an amended complaint adding the firm as a defendant, alleging that
Reynolds was an employee, servant, and/or agent of the firm when the accident
occurred because she was in the scope of her employment.
The firm filed a motion for summary judgment and Carter filed a cross-motion.
The trial court granted the firms motion, leaving Reynolds as the sole defendant
in the case. On Carters motion for reconsideration based on new precedent, the
trial court determined that Reynolds was, in fact, acting within the scope of
her employment when she struck him and thus, granted Carters motion for partial
summary judgment with respect to respondeat superior liability.
The firm moved for leave to appeal the interlocutory order, which motion was
granted. In a published opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed the trial courts grant
of partial summary judgment to Carter, reasoning that Reynolds was acting within the
scope of her employment, thus making the firm liable under the doctrine of
respondeat superior. Carter, supra, 345 N.J. Super. at 77. The firm then moved
before us for leave to appeal, which motion we granted.
172 N.J. 170
(2002). We now affirm.
II
The heart of the firms argument is that the Appellate Divisions decision represents
a fundamental change in the law regarding an employers vicarious liability because the
court jettisoned the element of control, which the firm maintains is a necessary
aspect of the vicarious liability calculus. Carter counters that the Appellate Division merely
recognized a well-established exception to the going and coming rule carved out for
cases in which an employer requires an employee to use his or her
own vehicle for work. Carter argues alternatively that Reynolds activity on the day
in question fell within the special mission exception to the going and coming
rule. Finally, Carter urges us to consider adopting the broad enterprise liability theory
enunciated as the
respondeat superior standard by the California Supreme Court.
Hinman v.
Westinghouse Elec. Co.,
471 P.2d 988 (Cal. 1970) (in bank);
Huntsinger v. Fell,
99 Cal. Rptr. 666 (Cal. Ct. App. 1972).
III
Although as a general rule of tort law, liability must be based on
personal fault, the doctrine of
respondeat superior recognizes a vicarious liability principle pursuant
to which a master will be held liable in certain cases for the
wrongful acts of his servants or employees. W. Page Keeton, et al.
Prosser
and Keeton on the Law of Torts §§ 4, 69 at 21-23, 499-501 (5th
ed. 1984); Rhett B. Franklin,
Pouring New Wine into an Old Bottle: A
Recommendation for Determining Liability of an Employer Under Respondeat Superior,
39
S.D. L.
Rev. 570, 572 (1994). The theoretical underpinning of the doctrine of
respondeat superior
has been described as follows: that one who expects to derive a benefit
or advantage from an act performed on his behalf by another must answer
for any injury that a third person may sustain from it.
Winkelstein v.
Solitare,
129 N.J.L. 38, 40 (Sup. Ct. 1942) (citations omitted),
affd per curiam,
130 N.J.L. 158 (E. & A. 1943);
27 Am. Jur. 2d Employment Relationship
§ 459 (1996).
Under
respondeat superior, an employer can be found liable for the negligence of
an employee causing injuries to third parties, if, at the time of the
occurrence, the employee was acting within the scope of his or her employment.
Lehmann v. Toys R Us, Inc.,
132 N.J. 587, 619 (1993) (quoting
Restatement
(Second) of Agency § 219 (1958)). To establish a masters liability for the acts
of his servant, a plaintiff must prove (1) that a master-servant relationship existed
and (2) that the tortious act of the servant occurred within the scope
of that employment. Those are two entirely distinct concepts governed by different legal
principles. The former focuses on the nature of the relationship. If no master-servant
relationship exists, no further inquiry need take place because the master-servant relationship is
sine qua non to the invocation of
respondeat superior.
See, e.g.,
Wright v.
State,
169 N.J. 422, 436 (2001) (observing that doctrine of
respondeat superior is
based on existence of master-servant relationship). If such a relationship exists, its margins
are the subject of the scope of employment inquiry.
Restatement (Second) of Agency
§ 228 comment a (1958).
A.
We turn first to the master-servant relationship. Like forty-four of our sister states,
See footnote 1
we recognize section 220 of the Restatement (Second) of Agency as the touchstone
for determining who is a servant.
Wright,
supra, 169
N.J. at 436;
Mavrikidis
v. Petullo,
153 N.J. 117, 131-32 (1998). Section 220 provides:
A servant is a person employed to perform services in the affairs of
another and who with respect to the physical conduct in the performance of
the services is subject to the others control or right to control.
In determining whether one acting for another is a servant or an independent
contractor, the following matters of facts, among others, are considered:
the extent of control which, by the agreement, the master may exercise over
the details of the work;
whether or not the one employed is engaged in a distinct occupation or
business;
the kind of occupation, with reference to whether, in the locality, the work
is usually done under the direction of the employer or by a specialist
without supervision;
the skill required in the particular occupation;
whether the employer or the workman supplies the instrumentalities, tools, and the place
of work for the person doing the work;
the length of time for which the person is employed;
the method of payment, whether by the time or by the job;
whether or not the work is a part of the regular business of
the employer;
whether or not the parties believe they are creating the relation of master
and servant; and
whether the principal is or is not in business.
[Restatement (Second) of Agency § 220 (1958).]
Our model jury charge regarding the definition of a servant is identical to
Restatement section 220 with the addition of one line: [S]uch other factors as
may be reasonably considered in determining whether the employer has control or right
to control the person employed. Model Jury Charges (Civil) § 4.22(A) (June 1979) (emphasis
added). As that charge intimates, control by the master over the servant is
the essence of the master-servant relationship on which the doctrine of respondeat superior
is based. Wright, supra, 169 N.J. at 436 (quotation marks and citation omitted);
see Keeton, supra, § 70 at 501 (The traditional definition of a servant is
that he is a person employed to perform services in the affairs of
another, whose physical conduct in the performance of the service is controlled, or
is subject to a right of control, by the other. (emphasis added) (footnote
omitted)).
B.
Once the master-servant relationship is established, it is necessary to decide the question
of whether the particular tortious conduct took place within the scope of that
employment relationship. Proof that the employer-employee relationship exists does not, in and of
itself, create an inference that a given act done by the employee was
within the scope of employment.
Restatement (Second) of Agency § 228 comment b (1958).
Scope of employment is a commonly cited principle, but its contours are not
easily defined.
This highly indefinite phrase, which sometimes is varied with in the course of
employment, is so devoid of meaning in itself that its very vagueness has
been of value in permitting a desirable degree of flexibility in decisions. It
is obviously no more than a bare formula to cover the unordered and
unauthorized acts of the servant for which it is found to be expedient
to charge the master with liability, as well as to exclude other acts
for which it is not. It refers to those acts which are so
closely connected with what the servant is employed to do, and so fairly
and reasonably incidental to it, that they may be regarded as methods, even
though quite improper ones, of carrying out the objectives of the employment.
[Keeton, supra, § 70 at 502; see Di Cosala v. Kay,
91 N.J. 159,
169 (1982) (The scope of employment standard, concededly imprecise, is a formula designed
to delineate generally which unauthorized acts of the servant can be charged to
the master. (citation omitted)).]
Some factors that courts have considered when assessing the scope of employment include:
the nature of the employment, the duties of the employee, whether the accident
occurred in the course of fulfilling some job-related function, or whether it occurred
during a trip personal to the employee. Christopher Vaeth, J.D., Annotation, Employers Liability
for Negligence of Employee in Driving His or Her Own Automobile,
27 A.L.R.5th
174, 174 (1995).
In New Jersey, as in most other states,
See footnote 2 scope of employment is subject
to analysis under Restatement sections
228 and 229, which provide in relevant part
that an employees conduct falls within the scope of employment if:
it is of the kind he is employed to perform;
it occurs substantially within the authorized time and space limits;
it is actuated, at least in part, by a purpose to serve the
master,
. . . .
(2) Conduct of a servant is not within the scope of employment if it
is different in kind from that authorized, far beyond the authorized time or
space limits, or too little actuated by a purpose to serve the master.
[Restatement (Second) of Agency § 228 (1958).]
Restatement section 229 provides:
To be within the scope of the employment, conduct must be of the
same general nature as that authorized, or incidental to the conduct authorized.
(2) In determining whether or not the conduct, although not authorized, is nevertheless so
similar to or incidental to the conduct authorized as to be within the
scope of employment, the following matters of fact are to be considered:
whether or not the act is one commonly done by such servants;
the time, place and purpose of the act;
the previous relations between the master and the servant;
the extent to which the business of the master is apportioned between different
servants;
whether or not the act is outside the enterprise of the master or,
if within the enterprise, has not been entrusted to any servant;
whether or not the master has reason to expect that such an act
will be done;
the similarity in quality of the act done to the act authorized;
whether or not the instrumentality by which the harm is done has been
furnished by the master to the servant;
the extent of departure from the normal method of accomplishing an authorized result;
and
whether or not the act is seriously criminal.
[Id. § 229; see Government Employees Ins. Co. v. United States,
678 F. Supp. 454, 456 (D.N.J. 1988) (noting that New Jersey follows Restatement approach to scope
of employment analysis and applying same); Di Cosala, supra, 91 N.J. at 169
(using Restatement principles to guide scope of employment analysis).]
C.
Generally, an employee who is going to or coming from his or her
place of employment is not considered to be acting within the scope of
employment.
Mannes v. Healey,
306 N.J. Super. 351, 353-54 (App. Div. 1997) (citations
omitted). That rule had its genesis in workers compensation law and has been
imported into tort law.
Courtless v. Jolliffe,
507 S.E.2d 136, 141 (W. Va.
1998) (per curiam) (citing 1
Larsons Workers Compensation Law § 16.10 (1972)). Indeed, most
jurisdictions apply the general rule that an employee who is driving his or
her personal vehicle to and from the employers workplace is not within the
scope of employment for the purpose of imposing vicarious liability on the employer.
Mannes,
supra, 306
N.J. Super. at 353-54 (citations omitted);
see, e.g.,
Freeman v.
Manpower, Inc.,
453 So.2d 208, 209 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1984);
Jones
v. Blair,
387 N.W.2d 349, 355 (Iowa 1986);
Logan v. Phillips,
891 S.W.2d 542, 544 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995);
Lundberg v. State,
255 N.E.2d 177, 179
(N.Y. 1969);
Windsor Ins. Co. v. American States Ins. Co.,
22 P.3d 1246,
1248 (Utah Ct. App.),
cert. denied,
29 P.3d 1 (Utah 2001); Vaeth,
supra,
27
A.L.R.5th at 233-39 (collecting cases). The Restatement addresses the going and coming
rule in section 229, comment d: [i]t is essentially . . . the
employees own job of getting to or from work. Franklin,
supra,
39
S.D.
L. Rev./u>. at 587 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Agency § 229 comment d (1958)).
Two rationales exist to support the going and coming rule. Mannes, supra, 306
N.J. Super. at 354. The first is that employment is suspended from the
time the employee leaves the workplace until he or she returns. Ibid. That
suspension occurs because the element of control is deemed lacking. Ibid. (citing Jones,
supra, 387 N.W.
2d at 355; Logan, supra, 891 S.W.
2d at 545). The second
is that the employer derives no benefit from the commute. Kester v. Mattis,
Inc.,
204 N.W.2d 741, 742 (Mich. Ct. App. 1972) (per curiam); Logan, supra,
891 S.W.
2d at 544; Klopp v. Rape,
271 N.E.2d 315, 317 (Ohio Ct.
App. 1970) (per curiam). Those rationales are essentially inversions of the Restatement standards
for vicarious liability. One commentator has explained that the purpose that underlies the
going and coming rule is that it is unfair to impose unlimited liability
on an employer for conduct of its employees over which it has no
control and from which it derives no benefit. Franklin, supra,
39 S.D. L.
Rev. at 588 (footnote omitted). In essence, when employees travel to or from
work they are deemed to be acting in their own interests without constraints
by the employer regarding the method or means of the commute.
There are, however, exceptions to the going and coming rule. Those exceptions are
also rooted in workers compensation law but have been engrafted onto tort law.
See, e.g., 1 Larsons Workers Compensation Law §§ 14.05, 15.05, 16.02 (2002). Thus, respondeat
superior has been held to apply to a situation involving commuting when: (1)
the employee is engaged in a special errand or mission on the employers
behalf; (2) the employer requires the employee to drive his or her personal
vehicle to work so that the vehicle may be used for work-related tasks;
and (3) the employee is on-call. Mannes, supra, 306 N.J. Super. at 354-55
(citations omitted).
Those so-called dual purpose exceptions cover cases in which, at the time of
the employees negligence, he or she can be said to be serving an
interest of the employer along with a personal interest. Gilborges v. Wallace,
78 N.J. 342, 351 (1978) (noting that New Jersey has adopted dual purpose exception,
which provides basis for employer liability when employee is furthering employers business as
well as his or her private interests). It makes sense that those exceptions
to the going and coming rule exist. Unlike ordinary commutation in which an
employer really has no interest, each of the noted exceptions involves some control
over the employees actions and a palpable benefit to be reaped by the
employer, thus squarely placing such conduct back into the vicarious liability construct of
the Restatement.
This case involves the required-vehicle exception described above. In Mannes, supra, that exception
was recognized but ultimately held inapplicable because at the time of the accident,
the employer did not require the employee to use a particular vehicle. 306
N.J. Super. at 355. It was also recognized in Pfender v. Torres, where
plaintiff was injured by the automobile negligence of Torres, an employee of Don
Rosen Imports, Inc. (DRI).
336 N.J. Super. 379, 383, 385, 393-94 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
167 N.J. 637 (2001). At the time of the accident, Torres
was driving to work in a car provided by DRI, which he used
as a personal vehicle and which had to be available as a demonstrator
at the car dealership. Id. at 393. The car was also used during
the workday for work-related errands. Ibid. The trial court directed a verdict in
favor of DRI at the conclusion of the evidence. Id. at 392. The
Appellate Division reversed. Id. at 394. In so doing, the court invoked the
required-vehicle exception:
DRIs liability under that well-recognized exception is clear since Torres was driving to
work when the accident happened and he was required to use the car
in the performance of his employment as a demonstrator to encourage sales and
to run work-related errands.
[Ibid.]
See also OToole v. Carr, - N.J. - (2003) (recognizing required-vehicle exception). That
is the backdrop for our inquiry.
IV
A master-servant relationship plainly existed between Reynolds and the firm. Further, the Appellate
Division concluded that because Reynolds spent one-third of her work time on the
road visiting firm clients; was required by the firm to have her own
car available for such activities; and actually was returning from a client visit
at the time of the accident, she came within the required-vehicle exception to
the going and coming rule outlined in
Mannes and applied in
Pfender.
Carter,
supra, 345
N.J. Super. at 74. We agree.
The firms contrary view that the required-vehicle exception is narrower than the Appellate
Division realized is based upon
Oaks v. Connors,
660 A.2d 423 (Md. 1995).
There, the defendant was required to have a personal vehicle for traveling on
his job between his employers stores.
Oaks,
supra, 660
A.
2d at 425. He
was involved in an accident on his way to a work assignment,
id.
at 425, and plaintiffs argued that the employer was vicariously liable because defendant
was transporting a vehicle to the job site that the employer required him
to have available for use in the course of his employment,
id. at
427. The intermediate appellate court agreed.
Connors v. Oaks,
642 A.2d 245, 251
(Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1994) (finding employer vicariously liable under
respondeat superior for
employees negligent operation of his personal vehicle while commuting to work when employer
required employee to bring his personal vehicle to work to fulfill job-related responsibilities),
revd,
660 A.2d 423 (Md. 1995). The Maryland Court of Appeals reversed. Although
recognizing the required-vehicle exception and acknowledging that the employer directed the employee to
have a vehicle available for work-related tasks,
Oaks held that because the employee
was neither actually performing a work-related task nor advancing his employers business purposes
at the time of the accident, the exception did not apply.
Oaks,
supra,
660
A.
2d at 427. The court further observed that the employer exerted no
control over the method or means by which the employee operated his vehicle.
Ibid.
We disagree with that rather narrow analysis. To be sure, ordinary commuting is
beyond the scope of employment because of the absence of control and benefit.
Driving a required vehicle, however, is a horse of another color because it
satisfies the control and benefit elements of
respondeat superior. An employee who is
required to use his or her own vehicle provides an essential instrumentality for
the performance of the employers work.
Konradi v. United States,
919 F.2d 1207,
1212 (7th Cir. 1990) (finding under Indiana law, employee who drove personal truck
to and from work as required conferred a
benefit on his employer because
he was bringing an essential instrumentality of the employers business). When a vehicle
must be provided by an employee, the employer benefits by not having to
have available an office car and yet possessing a means by which off-site
visits can be performed by its employees. It is that benefit that the
Oaks court overlooked.
Oaks was equally wide of the mark regarding control. When an employer requires
an employee to use a personal vehicle, it exercises meaningful control over the
method of the commute by compelling the employee to foreswear the use of
carpooling, walking, public transportation, or just being dropped off at work.
See Konradi,
supra, 919
F.
2d at 1211-12 (finding that employer substantially controlled employees commute because,
among other things, employer required employee to use his personal vehicle instead of
other forms of commutation (
i.e., bus, train, or car pooling)).
On the day in question, Reynolds actually had made an off-site visit in
her car and was returning home from the off-site location when the accident
occurred. She was required to use her car for the visit. Her commute
therefore had a dual purpose insofar as it served interests of both Reynolds
and the firm. Moreover, the firms requirement that Reynolds use her car eliminated
alternate means of transportation. Thus, the firm is liable to the Carters under
the doctrine of
respondeat superior because Reynolds use of her personal automobile to
advance her employers business interests fell within the dual purpose, required-vehicle exception to
the going and coming rule and placed her squarely both within the employment
relationship and the scope of her employment at the time of the accident.
Obviously this is a fact-intensive inquiry. In every case in which a plaintiff
invokes the required-vehicle exception to the going and coming rule, he or she
must establish that the employer, in fact, required the vehicle to be provided
by the employee on the day in question.
V
Although we need not comment on Carters alternative contention that Reynolds was on
a special errand or mission for the firm when the accident occurred, we
add these observations. The special mission exception has fairly well-defined margins.
When an employee, having identifiable time and space limits on his employment, makes
an off-premises journey which would normally not be covered under the usual going
and coming rule, the journey may be brought within the course of employment
by the fact that the trouble and time of making the journey, or
the special inconvenience, hazard, or urgency of making it in the particular circumstances,
is itself sufficiently substantial to be viewed as an integral part of the
service itself.
[Carberry v. State, Div. of State Police,
279 N.J. Super. 114, 120 (App.
Div.) (quoting 1 Arthur Larson, The Law of Workmens Compensation § 16.11 at 4-204
(1990)), certif. denied,
141 N.J. 94 (1995).]
The special aspect of the exception requires, at the very least, that the
employee perform an act outside the ordinary confines of his or her job
description at the behest of the employer. That standard simply does not apply
in the circumstances here presented.
VI
Alternatively, Carter contends that we should adopt the broad enterprise liability theory that
is the standard for
respondeat superior in California.
Hinman,
supra, 471
P.2d at
990;
Huntsinger,
supra, 99
Cal. Rptr. at 668. Enterprise liability is nothing new.
It originated outside the law of torts in pure form in the workers
compensation schemes enacted in England and the United States around the turn of
the century. Gregory C. Keating,
The Theory of Enterprise Liability and Common Law
Strict Liability,
54
Vand. L. Rev. 1285, 1287 (2001);
accord Ricciardi v. Damar
Prods. Co.,
45 N.J. 54, 60 (1965) (recognizing underpinning of workers compensation scheme
to be belief that enterprise on behalf of which employee is acting should
absorb losses that inevitably and predictably are an incident of its operations). However,
as scholars have noted, by eliminating the requirement of fault in workers compensation,
the law of accidents became a house divided against itself.
Id. at 1290.
Entirely separate standards governed the same accident, depending on whether an employee or
an innocent third party was injured. Thus, according to legal commentators, the birth
of workers compensation was bound to, and in fact did, initiate a revolution
in the common law of torts.
Ibid. (citing Jeremiah Smith,
Sequel to Workmens
Compensation Acts,
27
Harv. L. Rev. 235 (1914)). What occurred was that the
enterprise theory expressed in workers compensation spread back into the law of torts
as workers compensation notions were imported into that field.
Id. at 1287-88 (footnotes
omitted). Thus, enterprise liability informs every
respondeat superior inquiry to some degree. It
is the breadth of the articulation that distinguishes one approach from another.
The California formulation states that the modern and proper basis of vicarious liability
of the master is not his control or fault but the risks incident
to his enterprise.
Huntsinger,
supra, 99
Cal. Rptr. at 668 (quoting
Hinman,
supra,
471
P.
2d at 990). In other words, [t]he losses caused by the torts
of employees, which as a practical matter are sure to occur in the
conduct of the employers enterprise, are placed upon that enterprise itself, as a
required cost of doing business.
Ibid. (quoting
Hinman,
supra, 471
P.
2d at 990
(quotation omitted)). However, we note that when commutation by employees who are required
to provide their own vehicles is concerned, the California rule is actually identical
to the required-vehicle exception.
See Huntsinger,
supra, 99
Cal. Rptr. at 668 (citing
Smith v. Workmens Comp. Appeals Bd.,
447 P.2d 365, 373 (Cal. 1968) (in
bank) ([I]n this day of a highly motorized society we cannot cast the
going and coming rule as a protective cloak over the shoulders of the
employer, who, for his own advantage, demands that the employee furnish the car
on the job.)). It may be that under different facts, consideration of the
broader California rationale would be warranted. We see no reason in this case
to undertake such a course of action.
VII
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES COLEMAN, ZAZZALI, and ALBIN join in JUSTICE LONGs
opinion. JUSTICE LaVECCHIA filed a separate concurring opinion in which JUSTICE VERNIERO joins.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
104 September Term 2001
DAVID CARTER and DONNA
CARTER, husband and wife,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
ALICE F. REYNOLDS,
Defendant,
and
STEVENS, FLUHR, CHISMAR,
ALVINO & SCHECHTER, C.P.A.,
Defendant-Appellant.
__________________________
LaVECCHIA, J., concurring.
I am able to join in the judgment of the Court and its
narrow holding that applies the required-vehicle exception to the goingand-coming rule and imposes
liability on this employer under a respondeat superior theory. Importantly, the Court eschews
any reliance on the broad enterprise liability theory that is the standard for
respondeat superior in California. Ante at ____; see also OToole v. Carr, ___
N.J. ___, ___ (2002) (slip op. at 5). The Court wisely declines to
adopt a standard that effectively abandons consideration of employer control in the context
of employee automobile accidents.
I have no hesitation in agreeing with the Courts assessment here that the
employer exercised control and derived benefit from requiring its employee to have her
motor vehicle at work that day and sending her, in that vehicle, to
an alternate site to perform duties. Her employer thus must bear vicarious liability
for the accident that occurred on her way home from that assignment. This
was not the employee's typical end-of-workday commute home from her regular worksite; it
was a return home from assigned off-site work duties. In that setting, the
cessation of workday duties did not signal the end of the employers control
and derived benefit from the condition of employment that required the use of
her vehicle in promotion of the employer's interest.
That said, fairly read, the Court's opinion does not stand for the proposition
that every invocation of the required-vehicle exception shall subject an employer to liability
for an automobile accident occurring during an employee's commutation. It surely has not
been, and is not as a result of this decision, the law of
this Court that all types of employees who commute to work by personal
vehicle, and who may be sent, via their own vehicle, on assignment from
time to time, now commute every day to and from their regular workplace
"under the control" of their employer. The Court has never considered such a
broadly sweeping application of the required-vehicle exception to the going-and-coming rule. The societal
cost and benefit of such an across-the-board application of the required-vehicle exception to
all employees who may have to commute to work by their own motor
vehicle and who may have to use their vehicle occasionally in work-related business
would require careful scrutiny, but not today and not on these facts. Because
that question is left for another day, I am able to join in
the Court's disposition.
Justice Verniero joins in this opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-104 SEPTEMBER TERM 2001
ON APPEAL FROM Appellate Division, Superior Court
DAVID CARTER and DONNA
CARTER, husband and wife,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
ALICE F. REYNOLDS,
Defendant,
And
STEVENS, FLUHR, CHISMAR,
ALVINO & SCHECHTER, C.P.A.,
Defendant-Appellant.
DECIDED February 19, 2003
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Long
CONCURRING OPINION BY Justice LaVecchia
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
AFFIRM
CONCUR
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ
X
JUSTICE COLEMAN
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE VERNIERO
(X)
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
(X)
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
JUSTICE ALBIN
X
TOTALS
7
Footnote: 1
See Restatement (Second) of Agency § 220 (1958) (collecting cases).
Footnote: 2
See Restatement (Second) of Agency §§ 228, 229 (1958) (collecting cases).