C. F. Lytle Co. v. Hansen & Rowland, Inc.

151 F.2d 573, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3396
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 1945
DocketNo. 11010
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 151 F.2d 573 (C. F. Lytle Co. v. Hansen & Rowland, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. F. Lytle Co. v. Hansen & Rowland, Inc., 151 F.2d 573, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3396 (9th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

DENMAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellants and defendants, C. F. Lytle Company, Inc., and Green Construction Company, joint venturers, here appeal from a judgment of the district court, jury being waived, that plaintiff and appellee, Hansen & Rowland, Inc., agents of the Phoenix Indemnity Company and assignee of its claim for insurance premiums, were entitled to judgment in the sum of $16,153.73 plus interest and costs. The claim was for short-rate public liability and property damage insurance premiums covering the period from June 17, 1942, to September 1, 1942. Jurisdiction of the district court was based upon diversity of citizenship, pot properly alleged in the petition for removal from the Washington state court but sufficiently appearing in the record.

There are two grounds of appeal. First, it is claimed that the insurance policy as written included only employees of appellants and their associate unit contractors, and hence should have been, but was not, construed to exclude the great bulk of the 1200 workers involved, who are urged to be rather employees of the United States Government. Second, it is claimed that another typewritten policy endorsement restricted policy coverage to operations “performed at, from or in connection with the construction of approximately 155 miles of Alaska highway from Slana, Alaska, to Canadian Line,” and the policy hence should have been construed as excluding premium liability for the major portion of the work of the appellants and associated contractors, which the district court found was performed outside the 155 miles of highway specified above.

On May 4, 1942, the appellants entered into a cost-plus fixed-fee engineeringmanagment contract with the United States Government “to assure the satisfactory completion of a portion of the Alaska highway from a point on the international boundary line between Canada and Alaska to a point near Slana, Alaska, a distance of approximately 155 miles, designated as Section A-l and A-2, as shown on the ‘Plan of Operations’ prepared by and on file with the Public Roads Administration.” Appellants’ functions included various aspects of procurement, coordination, supervision and keeping of records. In return for their services in directing this $8,400,000 project, appellants were to receive reimbursement for their expenditures and a fixed fee of $67,-200.

Pursuant to contract provision, on June 10, 1942, provisional authority was given the appellants by a telegram from the Commissioner of the Public Works Administration to procure public liability and property damage insurance “as * * * necessary to protect the management and construction contractors.”

Coverage by binder was effected on June 17, 1942. The policy here in suit was prepared and delivered one month later in the State of Washington, on July 17, 1942. This provided as to premium

“ * * * the earned premium shall be computed at a rate of 85% per hundred of remuneration of all named insureds

“The word ‘remuneration’ shall mean the entire remuneration earned during the Policy period by all employees of each and every named insured * *

It provided also that

“ * * * The Policy shall apply only to operations performed at, from or in connection with all or any part or division of the construction of approximately 155 miles of Alaska Highway from Slana, Alaska, to Canadian Line.”

It is clear, and apparently not disputed, that the phrase “all employees” of the premium provision is qualified and limited by the clause providing the policy shall apply only to the construction of certain sections of the Alaska Highway — qualified at least to the extent of narrowing it at least to Alaska Highway employees. In contention here is the status for policy premium purposes of the great bulk of workers on that highway directed by appellants. The position of appellee is that they were in fact and law employees of the appellants. Thé latter contend these men were, instead, exclusively government employees regarding whom appellants did not need to contract and did not, in fact, contract for insurance.

In interpreting the word “employees” guidance is afforded by investigation into the situation and probable inten[575]*575tion of the parties. The purpose of the policy, as far as appellants were concerned, was their protection against any liability to third persons from the fault of persons on the project attributable to them as employees. This is, for example, evidenced by the authorizing telegram they sought and received which approved such insurance as was “necessary to protect the management and construction contractors.”

During preliminary negotiations both parties dealt in general terms with “all operations” in connection with the construction of the specified sections of road. No reason appears nor is any suggested why appellants should have desired to exclude any employee for whose fault they would probably or certainly be held responsible to third persons. Such exclusion was not specifically made, and no reasonable inference here warrants the construction of the policy as failing to accomplish in this regard the protective purpose for which it was sought.

The problem of course remains whether the workers whose status is disputed were in fact and law employees for whose fault appellants would be liable. We conclude that in this sense, and so within the policy’s meaning, these workers were employees of appellants.

Appellants’ contention to the contrary is based substantially upon the following government dealings with the men. Under .a permissive clause of the contract, the government, through the Public Roads Administration, made an election to pay the workers directly instead of through the contractors. To do this it was legally necessary to give them civil service status. This arrangement covered all contractor personnel except the contractors themselves and their immediate representatives, approximately fifteen in all.

Such civil service employees had to have their hiring and other changes in status approved, though not initiated, by government representatives. They were paid by government check. Additionally, with respect to disability compensation, social security and overtime, the men were treated as government employees during the coverage period. It was some six months later that this arrangement was abandoned and individual hiring agreements made by the contractors.

Under this arrangement it seems the workers engaged in road construction were in some sense government employees. But we deem it clear, too, that in a very real way they were in fact employees as well of appellants and their associated contractors, so that there was, at the very least, a high probability that appellants would be chargeable with their faults; consequently they were within the risk sought to be covered and covered by the policy.

The law generally does not appear in conflict on the principle of loaned servants here involved. A Washington pronouncement is thus set forth in Macale v. Lynch, 110 Wash. 444, 448, 188 P. 517, 518:

“It is, of course, well-settled law that one who is in the general employ and pay of one person may be loaned or hired, by his employer to another, and, when he undertakes to do the work of the other he becomes the servant of such other, to perform the particular transaction. Standard Oil Co. v. Anderson, 212 U.S. 215, 29 S.Ct. 252, 53 L.Ed. 480; Olson v. Veness, 105 Wash. 599, 178 P. 822.

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Related

Peoples Supply, Inc. v. Vogel-Ritt of Penn-Mar-Va., Inc.
173 F. Supp. 199 (N.D. West Virginia, 1958)
Hansen & Rowland, Inc. v. C. F. Lytle Co.
167 F.2d 170 (Ninth Circuit, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
151 F.2d 573, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-f-lytle-co-v-hansen-rowland-inc-ca9-1945.