Brewer v. Kansas Electric Power Co.

83 P.2d 103, 148 Kan. 434, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 8, 1938
DocketNo. 33,944
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 83 P.2d 103 (Brewer v. Kansas Electric Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. Kansas Electric Power Co., 83 P.2d 103, 148 Kan. 434, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 204 (kan 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

This was an action by an employee against a corporation to recover, under the first count, wages alleged to be due him, and under the second count, a penalty for failure to pay the same under the provisions of G. S. 1935, 44-301 and 44-302. The trial [435]*435court overruled the demurrer of the defendant, The Kansas Electric Power Company, to plaintiff’s evidence on the first count and sustained its demurrer to the evidence on the second count. The defendant introduced its evidence and the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law. Judgment went for the plaintiff on the first count and against him on the second count. From the judgment and from the order overruling its motion for a new trial defendant appealed. Plaintiff cross-appealed only from the order sustaining defendant’s demurrer to his evidence on the second count.

We shall first consider errors urged by the defendant. The pertinent facts found by the trial court were:

“1. The court finds that on and prior to July 13, 1937, the defendant, The Kansas Electric Power Company, a corporation, was operating and maintaining in the city of Emporia, Kan., a system of motor-bus transportation under and by virtue of a valid franchise granted to said company by the city of Emporia, and an ordinance relating thereto, introduced in evidence, by stipulation of the parties, as plaintiff’s exhibit ‘A.’
“2. The court further finds that on July 13, 1937, the defendant entered into a written contract with Elmer Z. Reeves and Ernest Callison, of Winfield, Kan., whereby for a valuable consideration, the defendant assigned and contracted to the said Reeves and Callison, aforesaid, the operation of motor buses for the transportation of passengers in the city of Emporia, Kan., for a term of five years, and thereby delegated for said period of time, to the said Reeves and Callison the work of operating said transportation system required to be maintained and operated by the defendant under the franchise and ordinance heretofore referred to.
“3. The court further finds that pursuant to said contract the said Reeves and Callison took over the operation of said buses and transportation system in the city of Emporia, and between the first day of September, 1937, and the 14th day of October, 1937, inclusive, were operating and maintaining said transportation system pursuant to the written contract, heretofore referred to, entered into between the defendant and the said Reeves and Callison, which contract was introduced in evidence as plaintiff’s exhibit ‘B’ by stipulation of the parties.
“4. The court further finds that the city of Emporia, Kan., by resolution, duly enacted, voiced no objection to said contract, but specifically did not grant any rights to the said Reeves and Callison, nor waive any of its rights as against the defendant under its franchise and specifically reserved to said city its right to demand the faithful performance of the conditions of said franchise by the defendant under any and all circumstances, as disclosed by plaintiff’s exhibit ‘C’ introduced in evidence in this case by stipulation of the parties.
“5. The court further finds that on September 1, 1937, the said Reeves and Callison, a partnership, by and through Ernest Callison, orally employed the plaintiff as a mechanic and as an employee of the said Reeves and Callison to keep in repair the buses used in the operation of the transportation system to [436]*436be maintained under said franchise, and that the said Reeves and Callison agreed to pay the said plaintiff the sum of forty cents per hour for his services.
“6. The court further finds that plaintiff, pursuant' to said oral agreement, commenced work and performed labor and services as a mechanic for the said Reeves and Callison continuously from noon, September 1, 1937, to noon, October 14, 1937, and that, pursuant to said agreement, said plaintiff worked at least four hundred and thirty hours as a mechanic for the said Reeves and Callison, and is entitled to forty cents per hour for four hundred and thirty hours of work, or one hundred and seventy-two ($172) dollars for the services and work so performed by said plaintiff.”

The trial court concluded the provisions of G. S. 1935, 44-306, were applicable and that the defendant was liable for the wages of the plaintiff in the same manner and to the same extent as Reeves and Callison, who had employed the plaintiff. That section provides:

“Whenever any such corporation shall contract any or all of its work to any contractor, then it shall become the duty of such corporation to provide that the employees of such corporation or contractor shall be paid according to the provisions of this act, and such corporation shall become responsible and liable to the employees of such contractor in the same manner as if said employees were employed by such corporation.”

The trial court further concluded:

“From a careful examination of plaintiff’s exhibit ‘B,’ being the agreement entered into between the defendant and Reeves and Callison, it is apparent that the defendant'did not sell the franchise to the said Reeves and Callison, and that the city did not approve any such sale, but that the defendant merely, under said contract, delegated the operation of the transportation system, to be maintained under said franchise, to the said Reeves and Callison for the period of five years, and that the defendant merely delegated the work and service of maintaining a transportation system to the said Reeves and Callison for a period and term of five years under the terms, conditions and restrictions set forth in said contract.
“There is no question in the mind of the court but that the defendant contracted its work of maintaining a transportation system in the city of Emporia to the said Reeves and Callison and that the said Reeves and Callison was a contractor within the meaning of said section.” (Italics inserted.)

The defendant contends Reeves and Callison were not contractors who were doing work for it, but were lessees or assignees of a franchise and were engaged in an independent enterprise. Defendant also insists it exercised no supervision or control over the business management and operations under Reeves and Callison. It further urges it paid nothing to the latter for the operation of the transportation system.

We need not determine whether the facts in the instant case are such as would constitute Reeves and Callison independent con[437]*437tractors within a strict and technical, sense under other relations and circumstances. The question here is whether they should be regarded as contractors, in the instant case, in view of the apparent intent and purpose of the act in question. The answer must be found not only in the letter but in the spirit of the act, and in the terms and provisions of the contract involved. Let us first see whether Reeves and Callison were engaged in the operation of an independent enterprise as urged by defendant. That the franchise itself was not sold and that the fixed term over which Reeves and Callison were authorized to operate the transportation system as an independent enterprise, free from conditions and restrictions placed upon them by the defendant, will be amply disclosed by an analysis of the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 P.2d 103, 148 Kan. 434, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-kansas-electric-power-co-kan-1938.