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The Right to Indemnity between Master and Servant
19
Citations
0
References
1956
Year
Indentured ServitudeRomford IceWomen's RightEmployment LawFederal Labor LawLegal TheoryHuman RightsLawCold Storage Co.Legal ProcessAdministrative LawHuman Rights LawLaw ReformSocial Justice
The proposition that a master, who has become liable for an injury caused by a servant acting in the course of his employment, can recover an indemnity from the servant is one which has been stated on a number of occasions, but until the recent case of Romford Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Lister no clear authority could be cited in support. It is true that the master's rights against his servant have been canvassed in at least three modern cases, but in all of them the common law position has been obscured by the application of the Law Reform (Married Women and Tortfeasors) Act, 1935. In Romford Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Lister , however, by what those interested in legal principle can only regard as a happy chance, it was necessary for the Court of Appeal to deal with the matter independently of the Act.