Legal Principle: A master is liable for the acts of his servant as long as he can control the working of his servant.Factual Situation: A owned a taxi agency. She had hired B to drive one of her cars. On 1 January 2010, C called up A's taxi agency and asked for a car to drop him from his house to his place of work. On the way, because of the driver's negligence, the car hit a road divider and C was injured. He sued A for damages. (NLU DELHI 2010)

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Each question consists of legal principle(s) (hereinafter referred to as 'principle') and facts. Such proposition may or may not be true in the real and legal sense, yet you have to conclusively assume them to be true for the purposes of this section. You have to apply the principles to the given facts to arrive at the most reasonable conclusion. Only one of the alternatives, i.e., (A), (B), (C), or (D) is the most reasonable conclusion. Remember: you must not rely on any principle except the principles that are given for every question.

Legal Principle: A master is liable for the acts of his servant as long as he can control the working of his servant.<br>Factual Situation: A owned a taxi agency. She had hired B to drive one of her cars. On 1 January 2010, C called up A's taxi agency and asked for a car to drop him from his house to his place of work. On the way, because of the driver's negligence, the car hit a road divider and C was injured. He sued A for damages. (NLU DELHI 2010)






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