Vicarious Liability - Respondeat Superior and Scope of Employment Flashcards

1
Q

Riviello v. Waldron

Respondeat Superior and Scope of Employment

A

An employer is vicariously liable when an employee commits a negligent tort while on break. Restaurant employee was flipping a knife while talking with a customer and the customer lost his eye.

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2
Q

Fruit v. Schreiner

Respondeat Superior and Scope of Employment

A

An employer is vicariously liable when its employee drives negligently and causes an accident when the reason the employee was driving was at least partially to further his employer’s goals. Defendant employee was driving back from a restaurant where he hoped to meet some colleagues when he ran into plaintiff.

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3
Q

Employee Liability

A

Just because the employer can be sued doesn’t mean the employee is off the hook. The employer could implead the employee as a third-party defendant under indemnity or sue him after the first suit was resolved.

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4
Q

Traditional Vicarious Liability

A

An employee’s conduct was within the scope of employment if it was of the same general kind as authorized or expected, and the employee was acting within authorized time and space limits.

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5
Q

Agency Restatement Vicarious Liability

A

The Agency Restatement added that the employees conduct must be motivated, at least in part, by a purpose to serve the employer. Some courts reject this for broader definitions, such as the tort was committed within the ordinary course of business.

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6
Q

Vicarious Liability and Fault

A

The employers fault is not relevant in vicarious liability cases. Also, if the employees legally responsible for a tort, the employee cannot be vicariously liable.

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7
Q

Enterprise Liability

A

Enterprise liability is a legal doctrine under which individual entities can be held jointly liable for some action on the basis of being part of a shared enterprise. Holding the enterprise strictly liable can defuse costs caused by the enterprise and encourage the enterprise to make safer products.

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8
Q

Serving Two Master

Restatement (Third) of Agency

A

Liability depends upon which employer is in the better position to take measures to prevent the harm, looking at which employer has a right to control the employees conduct.

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9
Q

Serving Two Master

Traditional View

A

The first employer is vicariously liable and the second employer is not, unless evidence shows different based on who had control of the employee.

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10
Q

Serving Two Master

Both Employers

A

Both employers are liable if the employee was acting within the scope of employment of both employers.

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11
Q

Serving Gratuitously

A

For an employer to be vicariously liable for the torts of a volunteer, the volunteer must submit herself to the control of the employer.

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12
Q

Hinman v. Westinghouse Electric Company

Vicarious Liability During the Commute

A

An employee is in the scope of employment during his commute if the employer compensates the employee for his travel time and commute expenses. Defendant employee was on his way home from work when he was in an accident with Plaintiff. Employer was vicariously liable.

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13
Q

Going and Coming Rule

A

An employee going to and coming from work is not generally within the scope of employment.

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14
Q

Exceptions to the Going and Coming Rule

A
  • When the employee is on call, as long as the tortious act was otherwise in the scope of employment
  • When the employee is required to drive his personal vehicle to work so she can use it for work-related tasks.
  • When the employee has to do some work-related tasks during his commute.
  • When the commute serves a duel purpose for the employee and employer.
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15
Q

Edgewater Motels, Inc. v Gatzke

Temporary Deviations

A

An employer can be vicariously liable for an employee’s negligently smoking if he was otherwise acting within the scope of employment. Defendant employee lit a cigarette while filling out expense paperwork and the cigarette started a fire.

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16
Q

Temporary Deviations

A

Employers may be liable for their employee’s tortious act when the employees make temporary deviations from their work for personal comfort, convenience, health and welfare reasons as long as the employee is combining his own business with his employers or attending to both at the same time.

17
Q

Detour

A

If an employee makes a detour, such as getting gas, while still fully engaging in work activity, the employer may be liable for the employee’s tortious conduct.

18
Q

Frolic

A

If an employee stop acting to serve her employer and instead is acting for herself, the employer is not vicariously liable for any tortious acts. The frolic ends when the employee intends to act in furtherance of his employer’s business and he is in a time and place where he should engage in the work

19
Q

Montague v. AMN Healthcare

Required or Incidental Conduct

A

The conduct of an employee is within the scope of employment if her conduct is required by or incidental to her duties, or it is reasonably foreseeable in the light of the employer’s business. Defendant employee poisoned Plaintiff with carbolic acid after that had a couple minor arguments. Defendant’s duties did not involve carbolic acid and her personal malice was not foreseeable.

20
Q

Intentional Torts by Employees

A

Employers are not usually liable for their employees intentional torts. However, they may be vicariously liable if the motive to serve the employer is a highly relevant factor. For example, an employee’s job might give her the authority or power to commit a tort.

21
Q

Employer’s Liability Under an Alternate Theory

A

If there’s not evidence to prove vicarious liability, an employee might be held liable another way. For example, it might negligently hire an employee who is not qualified for the job and a tort could arise out of that.

22
Q

Strict Liability

A

Liability without fault

23
Q

Public Policy Reasons for Respondeat Superior

A
  • To prevent recurrence of the tortious conduct
  • To give greater assurance of compensation for the victim
  • To ensure that the victim’s losses will be equitably borne by those who benefit from the enterprise that gave rise to the injury
24
Q

Care Givers Etc.

A

Employers of care givers or other professions that naturally lead to a trusting relationship are often vicariously liable for their employee’s negligent or intentional torts because the very fact of their employment aided them in committing the tort