Clinton Cotton Oil Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.

186 S.E. 399, 180 S.C. 459, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 11, 1936
Docket14312
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 186 S.E. 399 (Clinton Cotton Oil Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clinton Cotton Oil Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., 186 S.E. 399, 180 S.C. 459, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 146 (S.C. 1936).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fishburne.

The Clinton Cotton Oil Company carried a public liability policy with the defendant-appellant, I-Iartford Accident & Indemnity Company, on its trucks and automobiles, .limited to $10,000.00 for injury to one person. The policy specifically excluded, among other things, liability for injury or death of any employee of the assured, arising out of, or in the usual course of, the assured’s business; and also excluded loss by liability accepted by the assured, in contract *461 or otherwise. The policy included a provision that the defendant would “defend in the name and on behalf of the assured any suit alleging such bodily injuries or death or property damage to which the insurance herein provided is applicable.”

On April 18, 1933, late in the afternoon, one George Boozer, a Negro laborer, who had previously been employed by the plaintiff, came to the office of its manager, J. H. Pitts, Jr., in the City of Laurens, to borrow money with which to buy a package of cigarettes. While he was at the office it statrted to rain, and the manager called to Boozer and the night watchman of the plaintiff, who was present, to hurry out and assist in unloading into a warehouse the contents of a truck of the plaintiff which had just driven up, loaded with chicken feed or some other type of feed, so as to get the feed out of the rain as quickly as possible.

While Boozer was actively engaged in assisting, or attempting to assist, in the unloading, the truck was suddenly backed, and he was crushed against the brick warehouse, suffering injuries which resulted in his death. The appellant was duly notified, and after an investigation declined to accept or acknowledge liability, on the ground that at the time the accident occurred Boozer was an employee of the plaintiff, and hence did not come within the liability coverage.

Suit was then brought by the legal representative of the estate of the deceased against Clinton Cotton Oil Company, in the Common Pleas Court for Laurens County for damages, in the amount of $10,000.00. The complaint in that action alleged, among other things, that Boozer “was directed and instructed by the Clinton Cotton Oil Company, its agents, servants and employees, to assist * * * in unloading a truck.” Clinton Cotton Oil Company filed an answer in the suit, which contains, in substance, a general denial, and the plea of contributory negligence. In due course a verdict, by consent, in the amount of $1,200.00 *462 was taken against the oil company in open Court, and judgment entered thereon.

Thereafter, in the Court of Common Pleas for Barnwell County, Clinton Cotton Oil Company instituted this action against the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, seeking recovery against the defendant for $1,468.15, covering settlement of the judgment hitherto referred to, and the costs and attorney’s fees incurred.

The defendant set up what is in effect a general denial, and pleaded certain provisions of the policy in question to the effect that its liability did not include an injury to one who was injured while in the assured’s employment, and further alleged that it could not be held liable for an amount paid voluntarily by the insured in settlement of a case.

At the close of the testimony for the plaintiff, a motion was made by the defendant for a directed verdict upon grounds hereinafter considered. This motion was overruled, and upon the cause being submitted to the jury a verdict in full for the plaintiff was rendered.

The defendant offered no testimony.

The exceptions upon appeal assign error to the trial Judge in overruling the motion for a directed verdict. The appellant contends that the case presents no issue of fact between the parties, and that the only questions involved are questions of law: First, as to whether or not George Boozer was an employee of the Clinton Cotton Oil Company at the time of his injuries; and, second, whether under the terms of the policy the acceptance by the assured of liability, evidenced by the consent verdict, barred its right to recover.

At the trial of the case below it was the contention of the plaintiff that the sole question for the jury to decide was whether or not the Negro, Boozer, was in the employment of the Clinton Cotton Oil Company at the time of his fatal injury.

The verdict, if sustained at all, must be sustained, on the ground upon which the case was submitted to the jury. The *463 trial Judge charged: “If George Boozer was an employee your verdict will be for the defendant, and if you find that he was not an employee your verdict will be for the plaintiff for the amount sued for.”

The manager of the plaintiff testified that when the truck, loaded with the feedstuff, drove up to the warehouse he requested Boozer to help unload it, and “it came up a rain, and they stopped unloading, and he ran out of the door and came back”; that he, as manager of the plaintiff, wanted to get the feedstuff out of the rain as soon as possible. The manager further testified: “The truck came- up with the feed, and a night watchman and I were there, and the truck drove in and in a hurry, and I said let’s get that feed off right quick, and you might say I was speaking for the night watchman and myself and the Negro and all, and I came out of the door just in front of the Negro, and I lacked about that much getting killed instead of the Negro.”

This testimony shows beyond question that Boozer was called by plaintiff’s manager to assist in the unloading of a truckload of feed in the emergency created by a rainstorm. He was engaged in an effort to preserve plaintiff’s property, and was acting pursuant to the request of the plaintiff’s manager when he sustained his fatal injury.

That the circumstances thus shown constituted him the servant or employee of the plaintiff at the time of the accident has been sustained by previous decisions of this Court.

In Jackson v. Southern Ry. (Carolina Division), 73 S. C., 557, 54 S. E., 231, it was held that where a station agent of a railroad company calls in a bystander to assist in pushing cars in order to save them from a fire, he discharges the duties of a superior agent or officer of the company, and must provide a safe place for the servant, so employed, to work, and if he be injured because cars were negligently uncoupled, the company is liable. It would be hard to find a case more apposite to the case at bar.' In each case the emergency existed, and in each instance the bystander responded *464 to the request of an agent to help save the property of the employer in an emergency.

In Tucker v. Buffalo Cotton Mills, 76 S. C., 539, 57 S. E., 626, 121 Am. St. Rep., 957, the Court reaffirmed the principle announced in Jackson v. Southern Ry., supra, and held that where a stranger in a cotton mill, by permission, is requested by a section boss to procure some oil from an oil pan, it makes the stranger an employee as to that particular work so as to render the master liable if he fails to furnish a safe place in which to work.

In Jackson v.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.E. 399, 180 S.C. 459, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-cotton-oil-co-v-hartford-accident-indemnity-co-sc-1936.