Brock v. Bowser

102 A.2d 121, 376 Pa. 209, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 14, 1954
DocketAppeals, 285 and 286
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 102 A.2d 121 (Brock v. Bowser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brock v. Bowser, 102 A.2d 121, 376 Pa. 209, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 432 (Pa. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

Clarence M. Bowser and his wife, Lobelia Bowser, trading as Clarence M. Bowser & Son, make sausage in a garage in the rear of their home at 2632 W. Oxford Street, Philadelphia. Their equipment consists of a grinder, which grinds the meat; a mixer, which mixes the meat; and a stuffer, which, as the term and the others seif-define themselves, stuffs the meat (into the pork casings). They employ a sausage man who works for them every Tuesday. It happens occasionally when business is particularly good that they run out of sausage by the end of the week, and, on.those occasions their son, known as Sonny, undertakes to supply enough sausage to take care of their sausage-less customers over the weekend.

On December 16, 1950, which was one of those Saturdays, Sonny, 15 years of age, called on his companion Joe Brock, Jr., 16 years of age, who'lived only á half block away, and'asked him- to participate with him in the venture of the day which was to produce 100 pounds of sausage. Joe had helped out before, and for his participation had received, with Sonny, from Clarence Bowser, odd sums of money, a “little change,” “movie money,” and sometimes he got a “couple of dollars.”

In the early afternoon of the Saturday referred to, Joe proceeded to clean out the sausage mixing machine which had been employed all morning. He.was wearing a coat apron with rolled-up sleeves which at full length were 6 inches longer than his arms. While scraping the bits of sausage meat loose from the sides of the machine and then using a water hose in the *211 further cleansing operation, a sleeve unrolled and became caught in the knives of the electrically operated apparatus. When he was finally extricated, he had sustained a broken arm and other injuries.

His father brought a suit in trespass against the defendants. At a trial before Judge Gubkin in the Common Pleas Court of Philadelphia County, the plaintiff was non-suited on the ground that the relationship between Joseph Brock, Jr., and the Bowsers was an employe-employer one. The court en banc granted plaintiffs’ motion to remove the non-suit. The defendants appealed to the Supreme Court, but the appeal was later withdrawn and discontinued. The case then went to trial before Judge Smith and a jury, and a verdict was returned in favor of the minor plaintiff and his father. The defendants have now appealed to this Court, from the refusal of a motion for judgment n.o.v., and for a new trial, urging the same employe-employer relationship raised before.

An extraordinary barrier, and, as we see it, an insurmountable one, rises before counsel for the defendants. While he is arguing that his clients Clarence Bowser and Lobelia Bowser employed Joe Brock, the clients themselves are insisting that they did not. It is not unknown for lawyer and client to disagree in the offices of the lawyer and even in the lobby , of the courthouse on the way to the trial, but scarcely does it happen that in the very tribunal in which the lawyer, is presumably championing the cause of his client we find the .lawyer. and client on opposite sides, contending-against each, other/Clarence. Bowser testified iir court /as hollows:: “Q.. Did he work for you on previous ./occasions? • A. No-,he never worked for:. me. ,Q.-. Did he/.work for /Sonny? L A; Me used to help Sonny /out. ; Q: - What ..did. he: do. for Sonny? A.. Well, say, .for instance/1 would, leave, a job. for /Sonny., to do *212 and quite naturally lie runs around to get Mm in order to get the work done, or the place cleaned, and they would jump together and help one another out. . . Q. What did they do? A. Well, say for instance I left word to make up some sausage, or clean the place, well, Sonny, he would be cleaning the place up and if — Joe Brock was around there three hundred and sixty-five days a year, he was always around there, and Sonny would be around his house.”

He also testified under cross-examination: “Q. Did you ask Joseph Brock, Jr., to work for you that day? A. No I did not. Q. Did you have any arrangement with Joseph Brock, Jr., concerning the payment of any wages or salary that day? A. ... No I did not. Q. Did you have any arrangements concerning any hours Joe Brock, Jr., was to put in that day? A. No.”

The wife-defendant testified on cross-examination: “Q. Did you know Joe to work for you that day? A. I did not. Q. Did you pay him any salary that day? A. I did not. Q. Did you have any arrangements with him concerning any salary? A. I did not. Q. Did you have any arrangements with him concerning what hours he was to be in there that day? A. No.”

It seems when Judge Gubkin had nonsuited the plaintiff at the first trial, the plaintiff filed a claim for employe’s compensation. The defendants opposed the claim by answering the averment of the claimant with the statement: “Denied, claimant was not helper or employee.” Mrs. Bowser was asked in cross-examination if it was not true that she had in this manner formally rejected the relation of employer and she replied: “That is true.” Then she was asked: “In other words, Joseph Brock was not an employee or a helper?” And again she affirmed: “That is right.”

Still being cross-examined, she replied as follows.:

*213 “Q. Did Joseph Brock, Jr., work for you or your establishment that day (December 16, 1950) ? A. He was helping my son. . . . Q. Did he work for you that day? A. I didn’t — I don’t— Q. I say was Joseph working for you? Just answer my question. Did you hire— A. I did not. Q. Did you hire Joseph Brock that day? A. I did not. Q. Did he work for you or your establishment that day? A. He was out there in the garage with my son. Q. Oh, you know that? A. Yes, I know that. Q. But he didn’t work for you? A. No, he didn’t work for me. Q. Or your husband for that matter? You and your husband are partners, is that right? A. That is right.

Even assuming that the defendants were aware Joe was helping their boy Sonny on that Saturday in question, this knowledge cannot make out the contractual relationship which is essential before an employment status can be established. The case of Harris v. Seiavitch, 336 Pa. 294, is authoritative of this indispensable pre-requisite. There, the defendant had asked the plaintiff to sit in the rear of his truck to keep other boys off the truck while he made deliveries. For this chore he promised to pay the plaintiff something. This Court affirmed the lower court’s ruling that the evidence merely established the promise of a gift or gratuity, specifically negating any relationship of master and servant: “As specifically set forth in section 104 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, supra, the word ‘employe’ means a person who performs services for another for a valuable consideration. To establish a master-servant relationship within the meaning of the act, it is necessary to show a contract, either express or implied, of employment for wages: Busch v. Bientzle, 119 Pa. Superior Ct. 559, 562. Here the lower court found that the evidence merely established a promise of a gift or gratuity and that there was no *214 contract for wages. The record amply sustains such findings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A.2d 121, 376 Pa. 209, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-bowser-pa-1954.