Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Cab Company Not Liable For Driver's Alleged Sex Assault On Passenger

The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2017 01:08 PM
    TORONTO — A taxi company cannot be held liable for the alleged sexual assault of a passenger by one of its drivers, Ontario's top court ruled on Friday.
     
    In dismissing an appeal by the complainant, the Court of Appeal sided with a lower court judge that the company had done no wrong.
     
    "The alleged sexual assault may be characterized as only coincidentally linked to the activities of the taxi company," the Appeal Court said. "The taxi company did not require or permit the driver to touch the customer in any intimate body zones."
     
    The alleged incident arose when a woman had a friend at a party call United Taxi in Kitchener, Ont., late one evening to come get her. The woman, who was intoxicated, claimed the driver sexually assaulted her. She sued him and the owner of the cab. She also sued the cab company on the basis that it was liable for the driver's actions.
     
    In September last year, Superior Court Justice David Broad dismissed her claim against the company.
     
    Evidence was that the driver had no criminal record. Nor was there any indication the company knew, or should have known, that he might have had a propensity for, or history of, sexual or other violence. As a result, Broad said, it would defy common sense to hold the company responsible for the alleged assault.
     
    "The wrongful acts alleged by the plaintiff against (the driver) were only coincidentally linked to United Taxi's activities as the operator of a taxi-dispatching business," Broad ruled.
     
    The woman appealed. While she didn't argue the company had actually done anything wrong, she nevertheless maintained it bore responsibility.
     
    The Appeal Court disagreed even though an employer can sometimes be held responsible for an employee's misdeeds without having been negligent or having done something blameworthy.
     
     
    Such a situation is known as "vicarious liability," and most commonly occurs when an employee accidentally causes loss or damage to a third party. An example might be when a supermarket worker leaves a mop on the floor and a customer trips on it.
     
    "The more difficult issue is when an employer should be found vicariously liable for an unauthorized, intentional wrong, such as a sexual assault, committed by the employee," the Appeal Court said.
     
    In such cases, Associate Chief Justice Alexandra Hoy wrote in the decision, courts generally refrain from imposing liability for an employee's "abhorrent, intentional acts."
     
    A key consideration in making an exception, Hoy said in citing case law, is the existence of a strong connection between what an employer asks an employee to do and the wrongful act itself.
     
    "It must be possible to say that the employer significantly increased the risk of the harm by putting the employee in his or her position and requiring him to perform the assigned tasks," the Appeal Court noted.
     
    In analyzing this case, Hoy agreed that a driver has some power over a lone, intoxicated woman, but said the connection to the company's demands of its employees wasn't strong enough to make it responsible.
     
    "Sadly, however, she is prey not only to taxi drivers," the court said. "The power the driver allegedly wrongfully exercised was not predicated on his employment."
     
    The court also noted the alleged assault did not further the company's aims. In fact, its driver rules state: "Do not touch any customer if possible," and "Do not ask a customer out for a date."
     
    The Canadian Press does not name alleged victims of sexual assault without their active consent.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Women-only Overdose Prevention Site Opens On Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    VANCOUVER — A safe injection site that will only serve women has opened on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

    Women-only Overdose Prevention Site Opens On Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Drier Conditions Ease Flood Threat In B.C., But Warm Weather Could Complicate

    Drier Conditions Ease Flood Threat In B.C., But Warm Weather Could Complicate
      Regional District officials say recent drier weather stabilized slopes in the Shuswap region near Tappen, and in the Killiney Beach subdivision on the west side of Okanagan Lake.

    Drier Conditions Ease Flood Threat In B.C., But Warm Weather Could Complicate

    Soggy Spring Won't Delay Watering Restrictions Across Metro Vancouver

    Soggy Spring Won't Delay Watering Restrictions Across Metro Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — Lawn watering restrictions are now in effect across Metro Vancouver despite a soggy spring.

    Soggy Spring Won't Delay Watering Restrictions Across Metro Vancouver

    Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins

    Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins
    VANCOUVER — There will be no new whales, dolphins or porpoises kept at the Vancouver Aquarium in the future if the city's park board approves changes to its cetaceans bylaw on Monday.

    Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins

    Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV

    Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV
    It starts at $14.95 per month for a package of 30 channels, which includes Canadian networks CBC, CTV, Global and City and the big U.S. networks ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC

    Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV

    Drug Checks At B.C. Supervised Injection Site Found 80% Contained Fentanyl

    Drug Checks At B.C. Supervised Injection Site Found 80% Contained Fentanyl
    A pilot project to test street drugs for fentanyl at the Vancouver safe injection centre Insite has found that about 80 per cent were laced with the potentially deadly opioid.

    Drug Checks At B.C. Supervised Injection Site Found 80% Contained Fentanyl