Cease v. Thomas, Exrx.

38 A.2d 547, 155 Pa. Super. 215, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 497
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 8, 1944
DocketAppeal, 19
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 A.2d 547 (Cease v. Thomas, Exrx.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cease v. Thomas, Exrx., 38 A.2d 547, 155 Pa. Super. 215, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 497 (Pa. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

The claimant, Alfred E. Cease, was badly hurt on June 25, 1940 by the collapse of a scaffold on which, with others, he was working as a carpenter, reshingling the roof of a grocery store building owned by Carter Bache.

He filed a claim petition for workmen’s compensation, in which he averred that at the time of the accident he was employed by James E. Thomas, a building contractor, who was also working on the scaffold at the time of its collapse. Mr. Thomas died the day after the accident, and the claim was filed against his executrix and his ifisurance carrier, Travelers Insurance Company.

Mr. Cease also filed a claim petition asking compen-sation from Mr. Bache, the owner of the building and proprietor of the grocery store. See Sgattone v. Mulholland & Gotwals, 290 Pa. 341, 345, 138 A. 855; Lecker v. Valentine, 286 Pa. 418, 421, 133 A. 792.

The two claims, by agreement of the parties, were *217 heard together before the same referee, who found that the claimant, Cease, at the time of his injury, was employed by James E. Thomas; and that he was still totally disabled as a result of the accident. Accordingly, he awarded Cease compensation for total disability against Thomas’s Estate or his insurance carrier; and dismissed the claim petition against Bache.

Appeals were filed by the attorney who appeared for the defendants, (1) objecting to certain material findings of fact, as not being supported by the evidence, and (2) specifying as errors of law the admission in evidence of the testimony of (a) the claimant, and (b) Carter Bache, who, it was claimed, by reason of the death of James E. Thomas, were incompetent to testify under section 5(e) of the Act of May 23, 1887, P. L. 158.

The board, in passing on the appeals, held that Carter Bache was a fully competent witness; and'that, in the circumstances here presented, the claimant was also eom'petent to testify, and, accordingly, affirmed the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and award of the referee. On appeal to the common pleas, the court dismissed the appeal and affirmed the action of the board, and entered judgment against Travelers Insurance Company, insurance carrier, alone. See Span v. Accident & Guarantee Corp., 92 Pa. Superior Ct. 418, 420.

Prom this judgment the attorney of record for the defendant and insurance carrier took one appeal to this court, and made the required affidavit of appeal.

We may say,' at the outset, that if the claimant and Carter Bache were competent witnesses, the case against Thomas’ Estate and his insurance carrier was more than sufficiently proved. It is too clear to require a recital of the evidence. The testimony justifies the following summary of the facts: Carter Bache owned and operated a grocery store in the City of Nanticoke. He was a *218 person of means, for in addition to his regular business as a grocer, he owned a number of farms, operated by him together as ‘Maywood Farms’, and had two apartment houses and four other buildings in Nanticoke. He was not engaged in the business of buying and selling real estate; nor in the construction of buildings.

James E. Thomas was a carpenter and building contractor in Nanticoke, and was also the city building inspector. For several years past when Mr. Bache needed any carpenter work done to his buildings he had it attended to by Mr. Thomas, who worked on it himself and employed other carpenters to assist him, when necessary.

Bache engaged Thomas to reshingle the roof of Ms two-story grocery store building. Thomas employed three men to assist on the work, the claimant, another carpenter named Hayden Davis, and a laborer named Mai Lewis. Thomas hired and employed them all. Bache hired or employed none of them, although he did ask Thomas to give Davis a job. No directions were given by Bache to Thomas or his workmen as to how the work was to be done. Thomas directed the work, supplied the iron brackets and wooden planks of which the scaffold was constructed, and erected it. Bache had no authority to discharge any of the men working under Thomas. Thomas did, and had full control over them. In fact, one afternoon, Thomas ordered Cease, the claimant, to leave the Bache job and work the rest of the day at the house of J. W. Schreiner, the agent of Travelers Insurance Company, the insurance carrier, where he, Thomas, had a contract to build a new porch. Bache knew nothing of this circumstance. Thomas had two other contract jobs, besides Schreiner’s, that he was doing while he was reshingling the Bache roof, and he took time off the Bache job to work on and direct these other contracts and' to attend to his official duties as. city building inspector.

*219 Thomas was not regularly employed by Bache. Neither he nor his workmen were on Bache’s payroll or included in Bache’s workmen’s compensation insurance. Thomas carried workmen’s compensation insurance covering men working under him. While he did á good deal of repair work for Bache, three months might go by during which he would do no work at all for him. Bache did not fix the wages to be paid Cease, Davis and Lewis, but he paid Cease and Davis, for the work they had done on his roof during the week ending June 15th, the wages which they told him Thomas had agreed to p'ay them, — $7 per day of eight hours— and which he (Thomas) had told them to get from Bache. Bache did not customarily pay Thomas until’the latter presented Ms bill and he had presented none on this job up to the time of his death. No evidence was presented on behalf of the Thomas Estate.

In short, the evidence is clear that Bache engaged Thomas to reshingle his roof, and that Thomas employed the claimant, Cease, and his co-workers to assist him in doing the work, under and pursuant to his (Thomas’s) directions; that he, Thomas, was their employer and they were his employees.

Coming then to the questions of law, we agree with Commissioner Knoll, in his opinion, concurred in by the other members of the board, to wit: “We have no hesitancy in holding as to the testimony of Carter Bache, that the same was properly admitted”. Bache was the defendant in a workmen’s compensation claim filed by Cease. If it had been heard separately, he would have been, unquestionably, a competent witness. The fact that by agreement of the parties the two claims were heard together did not render him incompetent to testify. He was called by the claimant, not as his own witness but as under cross-examination, and his testimony was received without objection or exception by anybody (Poluski v. Glen Alden Coal Co., 286 Pa. *220 473, 476, 133 A. 819), until near the close of his examination, when he was asked a question relative to his testimony at a hearing before the referee in another workmen’s compensation claim, growing out of the same accident, brought against him by Thomas’s widow, in which he had been called as for cross-examination "by that claimant, and was thereby rendered competent to testify fully in that case, ('Section 6 of Act of 1887, supra); and the objection to his competency under the Act of 1887, supra, was confined to his testimony at the Thomas v. Bache

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A.2d 547, 155 Pa. Super. 215, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cease-v-thomas-exrx-pasuperct-1944.