Citation Numbers: 44 Misc. 2d 764, 255 N.Y.S.2d 114, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2380
Judges: Lynch
Filed Date: 1/8/1965
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Bernard Durkin, a key employee of the plaintiff, was injured while driving the plaintiff’s car. It collided with a vehicle driven by the defendant George and
There can be no recovery for a voluntary wage payment because such does not give rise to subrogation, either in contract or in equity. (Employers’ Liab. Assur. Corp. v. Daley, 271 App. Div. 662, affd. 297 N. Y. 745; City of New York v. Barbato, 5 N. Y. S. 2d 125; see, also, Ann. 70 ALR 2d 475.)
From at least the year 1612, it has been recognized that under certain circumstances a master could recover from a third party tortiously injuring his servant (Marys’s Case. [1612] 9 Coke 111b, 77 Eng. Beprint 895). “The action was apparently originally based upon status, as in the closely related situations where a parent sues for injury to a child or a husband for injury to his wife, the servant at that time ordinarily being a member of the master’s household and regarded as occupying a quasi-familial relationship with him” (Employer’s right of action against third person tortiously killing or injuring employee, Ann. 57 ALR 2d 802, 803).
Where the person wronged was an employee as distinct from being a quasi-familial servant was the problem squarely met by Woodward v. Washburn (3 Denio 369 [1846]). There, a clerk in the plaintiff’s store was, during store hours, tortiously locked in a bank by the defendant, a teller in the bank. The plaintiff sued for loss of his services. The court, in sustaining judgment for the plaintiff, stated (p. 374): “ It is enough that the relation of master and servant exists between the plaintiff and the person who is disabled or prevented from performing the service he has contracted to perform, by the tortious act of the defendant. It is not necessary, to sustain such action, to show that the person whose service has been lost by the plaintiff was either his apprentice or child. The reason and foundation upon which this doctrine is built seems to be, the property that every man has in the service of those whom he has employed, acquired by the contract of hiring, and purchased by giving them wages ”.
We .have found no further holdings in New York on the rule in the Woodward case since its pronouncement. Other jurisdictions have permitted such causes of action (Damour Prods. Corp. v. Baruch Corp., 135 Cal. App. 351; Ames v. Union Ry.
That portion of the complaint alleging damage for wages voluntarily paid the employee is stricken and the motion to dismiss the complaint as so amended is denied.