| 1869 - 820 lehte
...qualification which seems to have heen since engrafted upon the rule, said : " No duty can be implied upon the part of the master, to cause the servant to be...vice or imperfection unknown to the master, in the carriage or in the mode of loading and conducting it." The later English cases of Seymour v. Maddox,... | |
| Thomas William Saunders - 1871 - 338 lehte
...premises from which the duty of the defendant as therein alleged can be inferred in law: in other words, that from the mere relation of master and servant...securely carried, or to make the master liable for damages to the servant, arising from any vice or imperfection, unknown to the master, in the carriage... | |
| Edward Spike - 1872 - 182 lehte
...which the duty of the defendant as " therein alleged, can be inferred in law; or, in " other words, that from the mere relation of master " and servant...vice or imperfection, unknown to the " master, in the carriage, or in the modfl of loading " arid conducting it. For, as the declaration contains " no charge... | |
| Utah. Supreme Court, Albert Hagan, John Augustine Marshall, John Maxcy Zane, James A. Williams, Joseph M. Tanner, George L. Nye, John Walcott Thompson, August B. Edler, Alonzo Blair Irvine, Harmel L. Pratt, William S. Dalton, H. Arnold Rich - 1905 - 618 lehte
...from which the duty of the defendant, as therein alleged, can be inferred in law; or, in other words, that from the mere relation of master and servant...securely carried, or to make the master liable for damages to the servant arising from any vice or imperfection unknown to the master, in the carriage,... | |
| John Pitt Taylor - 1878 - 968 lehte
...invention was either useful or new.3 § 1182. From the ordmary relation of master and serrant, no § 1074 contract, and therefore no duty, can be implied on the part of the master, to protect the servant3 against any injury arising either from the negligence of another servant, —... | |
| John Pitt Taylor - 1887 - 1034 lehte
...invention was either useful or new.8 § 1182. From the ordinary relation of master and domestic or menial servant, no contract, and therefore no duty, can be implied on the part of the master, to protect the servant against any injury arising, either from the negligence of another servant, or from... | |
| Eugene Wambaugh - 1896 - 1100 lehte
...from which the duty of the defendant, as therein alleged, can be inferred in law ; or, in other words, that from the mere relation of master and servant...vice or imperfection, unknown to the master, in the carriage, or in the mode of loading and conducting it. For, as the declaration contains no charge that... | |
| Frederick Pollock, Robert Campbell, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead - 1911 - 882 lehte
...is [ <16 j liable. In Priestley v. Fowler (2) the objection, as stated by Lord ABINGER, p. 6, was " that from the mere relation of master and servant no contract, and therefore no duty, could be implied on the part of the master to cause the servant to be safely and securely carried,... | |
| Charles Albert Keigwin - 1915 - 604 lehte
...from which the duty of the defondnnt, as therein alleged, can be Inferred In law ; or, In other words, that from the mere relation of master and servant...securely carried, or to make the master liable for damages to the servant arising from any vice or imperfection, unknown to the master. In the carriage... | |
| Francis Hermann Bohlen - 1915 - 858 lehte
...from which the duty of the defendant, as therein alleged, can be inferred in law; or, in other words, that from the mere relation of master and servant...the servant to be safely and securely carried, or I to make the master liable for damage to the servant, arising from any vice or imperfection, unknown... | |
| |