Alphonso v. American Iron & Machine Works Co.

39 F. Supp. 934, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3090
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 11, 1941
DocketNo. 345
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 F. Supp. 934 (Alphonso v. American Iron & Machine Works Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alphonso v. American Iron & Machine Works Co., 39 F. Supp. 934, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3090 (E.D. La. 1941).

Opinion

CAILLOUET, District Judge.

On October 21, 1939, Earl Peter Alphonso, a welder’s helper, was returning with Emmett Craig (his co-worker, who described himself, by his testimony on the trial, as a combination welder and boiler maker), to the American Iron and Machine Works Company shop at Harvey, La., from the doing of a welding job, that afternoon, on a drilling rig of the Humble Oil and Refining Company, located at Port Sulphur, La.

Craig, as was the usual course of procedure, had been directed to said job by the shop foreman of the American Iron and Machine Works Company, upon call made for service of said company by the Humble Oil and Refining Company, under the terms of a written contract existing between the two companies with respect to the repair and maintenance of the oil company’s equipment, dated July 20, 1938; he had then directed Alphonso to accompany him as helper.

A collision took place between another motor vehicle and the motor truck wherein the two workmen had traveled to Port Sulphur and were now so returning to Harvey. This truck bore, on both sides, a sign, a large- circle with an “A” in the center thereof, which was generally known as the insignia of the American Iron and Machine Works Company; was registered and licensed as the truck of said company, and upon its steering wheel carried the registry receipt (as required by Louisiana law) in the name of said American Iron and Machine Works Company, and was covered by public liability and property damage insurance, under a policy reading in favor of “Perry Thompson and/or the American Iron and Machine Works Company,” and which had been taken out by the former.

Alphonso, the welder’s helper, was instantly killed in the collision, and his widow, Mrs. Sydney Chilton Alphonso, acting for herself, individually, and for her two minor children, Earl Peter Alphonso, Jr., aged 10 years, and June Rose Alphonso, aged 7 years, filed suit against the American Iron and Machine Works Company, as his alleged employer, and against Insurors Indemnity and Insurance Company, the carrier of the said company’s compensation insurance, in the 25th Judicial District Court of the State of Louisiana, in and for the Parish of Plaquemine, within the boundaries of which the fatal accident occurred.

The allegations of the plaintiff’s petition made out a prima facie case under the Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the State of Louisiana, Act La. No. 20 of 1914, as amended, and the petitioner sought to recover the maximum of $20 per week for a period not exceeding 300 weeks, for herself and for the use and benefit of her said two minor children, as well as the further sum of $150 for herself, individually, to cover the burial expenses attendant upon the death of her husband.

The petitioner set up that she had entered into a contract of employment with her attorneys of record for 20% of the amount which might be recovered, but not to exceed $1,000, and prayed that the said contract be recognized and enforced by the Court.

[936]*936The action was removed to this Federal Court by the American Iron and Machine Works Company, and its insurer, Insurors Indemnity and Insurance Company, both foreign corporations authorized to do business in this state.

The two defendants thereupon made the Associated Indemnity Corporation, also a foreign corporation and authorized to do business in the State of Louisiana and the carrier of the compensation insurance of one Perry Thompson, a third party defendant in due course. Their third party complaint denied the right of Mrs. Alphonso to recover_ against them, they alleging that Earl Peter Alphonso was not in the employ of the American Iron and Machine Works Company, and that, therefore, no obligation rested upon the said company nor upon its insurer, Insurors Indemnity and Insurance Company, to pay the compensation prayed for by the plaintiff; they specifically averred that the said mentioned Perry Thompson had entered into a contract with the American Iron and Machine Works Company to do and perform “certain welding work” as might become necessary in the operation of the business carried on by the American Iron and Machine Works Company, and that Earl Peter Alphonso, at the time of his injury and death, was working as a welder’s helper for the said Perry Thompson, an independent contractor and not a servant of the American Iron and Machine Works Company, who, pursuant to his said mentioned contract with the American Iron and Machine Works Company, had done the Humble Oil and Refining Company welding job of October 21, 1939.

The prayer of said joint third party complaint so filed by the American Iron and Machine Works Company and Insurors Indemnity and Insurance Company, was that judgment be rendered in favor of Mrs. Sydney Chilton Alphonso and against Associated Indemnity Corporation, third party defendant, for compensation at the rate of $20 per week for a period of 300 weeks, beginning October 28th, 1939, until paid, plus burial expenses of $150, with legal interest on both of said amounts until paid, and that her suit for compensation against third party plaintiffs American Iron and Machine Works Company and Insurors Indemnity and Insurance- Company, as original defendants, be dismissed; and, in the alternative, should their prayer for such judgment in plaintiff’s favor against Associated Indemnity Corporation be denied and judgment be actually recovered by her against them, the original defendants, then, and in that event, they, as third party plaintiffs, should be accorded judgment in like amount over and against Associated Indemnity Corporation “for compensation at the rate of $20.00 per week, for a period of 300 weeks, in addition to the sum of $150.00 burial expenses.”

The joint answer filed by the American Iron and Machine Works Company and Insurors Indemnity and Insurance Company to the plaintiff’s petition or complaint was in keeping with their contention that the deceased Earl Peter Alphonso had been in no way employed by the American Iron and Machine Works Company, but was truly the employee of Perry Thompson at the time of his injury and death; the third party complaint and the said joint answer being filed at one and the same time.

The third party defendant’s answer denied that Earl Peter Alphonso was in the employ of Perry Thompson and asserted that, in truth and in fact, he was an employee solely of the American Iron and Machine Works Company; and it prayed that the main and alternative demands, respectively, of the third party plaintiffs be denied) and that, in the alternative, if judgment ■ be rendered against the third "party defendant, then, in that event) similar judgment be rendered in its favor and against the two third party plaintiffs, in solido.

This being the state of the pleadings, the plaintiff, Mrs. Sydney Chilton Alphonso, filed a supplemental and amended petition, reciting what had so far taken place, and alleging that she had, necessarily, nothing but hearsay information concerning the circumstances attending her husband’s employment, and that the true facts were better within the knowledge of the American Iron and Machine Works Company and its insurer, Insurors Indemnity and Insurance Company, as were the facts and circumstances surrounding the relationship between Perry Thompson and said American Iron and Machine Works Company, of which she was wholly unaware.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 F. Supp. 934, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alphonso-v-american-iron-machine-works-co-laed-1941.