David E. Knight v. Cameron Joyce and Company, a Corporation, and Jewell E. Vandiver, D/B/A J. E. Vandiver Construction Company

252 F.2d 103, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3659
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 1958
Docket15827
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 252 F.2d 103 (David E. Knight v. Cameron Joyce and Company, a Corporation, and Jewell E. Vandiver, D/B/A J. E. Vandiver Construction Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David E. Knight v. Cameron Joyce and Company, a Corporation, and Jewell E. Vandiver, D/B/A J. E. Vandiver Construction Company, 252 F.2d 103, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3659 (8th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment for Cameron Joyce and Company and Jewell E. Vandiver, entered upon directed verdicts in their favor in a personal injury action brought by David E. Knight against them and Edward Arthur Michael, Sr., Edward Arthur Michael, Jr., and Thelma V. Michael. Jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship and amount in controversy.

Knight on June 17, 1955, while operating a vehicle known as a “Huber three-wheel flat roller” on United States Highway No. 69 in Clay County, Missouri, was injured when a dump truck owned by Edward A. Michael, Sr., and being driven by his son Edward A. Michael, Jr., collided with the rear end of the roller.

Knight brought this action upon the claim that the accident and his injuries were caused by the negligence of Michael, Jr., the driver of the dump truck, and that the other defendants were liable upon the ground that he was their agent and servant, or, in the alternative, was in the general employ of the defendants Edward A. Michael, Sr., and Thelma V. Michael, and in the special employ of the defendants Vandiver and Cameron Joyce and Company, “and was acting within the scope of his employment at all times for the express purpose of performing a service in the furtherance of an undertaking in which all the said defendants were jointly engaged.”

The defendant Vandiver, by answer, denied that Michael, Jr., was his servant, agent or employee, and denied that he (Vandiver) was engaged in any joint undertaking with any of the other defendants.

The defendant Cameron Joyce and Company asserted in its answer that Michael, Jr., was not its or Vandiver’s agent, servant or employee, and that Van-diver was an independent contractor under a hauling contract with Cameron Joyce and Company.

At the close of the evidence, the court granted a motion made by Vandiver for *105 a directed verdict in his favor on the ground that the accident in suit was caused by “acts and omissions of an individual contractor, for whose acts and omissions” Vandiver was not liable. It also granted a similar motion made by the defendant Cameron Joyce and Company. On a motion of the defendants Michael for a directed verdict, the court eliminated Thelma V. Michael from the case. It submitted the case to the jury only as to Michael, Sr., who owned the dump truck involved in the accident, and Michael, Jr., who drove it. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, against them, for $53,800.

The plaintiff contends that, under the evidence and the applicable Missouri law, the questions whether a master-servant relation existed between Vandiver and Michael, Jr., and whether there was such a relationship between Cameron Joyce and Company and Michael, Jr., were questions of fact for the jury, and that the court, therefore, erred in directing verdicts for those defendants.

The evidence showed that Cameron Joyce and Company in 1955 had a contract for the construction of that part of new United States Highway 69 between Liberty and Excelsior Springs, Missouri; that Cameron Joyce had arranged to have its bulk cement, to be used in construction, shipped to Randolph, Missouri; that it had a contract with Vandiver for the transportation of the cement from Randolph to the two batch or mixing plants of Cameron Joyce; that it was necessary to tell Vandiver each day where to take the cement that was being hauled; that Cameron Joyce “had to have this chain of supply of bulk* cement to their batch plants from the Randolph Landing,” and the employees of Cameron Joyce “oversaw that they had enough cement there at all times”; that Cameron Joyce had an employee to see that the trucks hauling cement from Randolph to the batch plants would be operating at a given time, and to “check these trucks for loss of cement, loose tarpaulins and that sort of thing”; that the cement belonged to Cameron Joyce, and was so treated; that its employees were in charge of loading the cement on the trucks and also unloading it, and that if the supply of cement got low because the trucks were not hauling, Cameron Joyce would notify Vandiver, and he would take care of it; and that, under his contract, evidenced by a letter of April 4, 1955, from Cameron Joyce, accepted in writing, Vandiver agreed to haul Cameron Joyce’s bulk cement “from railroad siding at Randolph, Missouri, to our various plant sites on the work” for seven cents per ton mile.

The evidence also showed that Vandi-ver was a contractor who owned eight trucks; that during the execution of his hauling contract with Cameron Joyce it became necessary for him to have additional trucks; that he entered into contracts with several truck owners, one of whom was Edward A. Michael, Sr., to haul cement from Randolph to the batch plants of Cameron Joyce for five cents per ton mile; that all of the truck drivers, when they reported for work in the morning, were told by Vandiver’s father, who was his foreman at Randolph, where to haul the cement loaded into the trucks by Cameron Joyce; that the load count was kept by an employee of that company at the place of delivery; that the load count, which constituted the basis of payment for the hauling by Vandiver and by the truckers, including Michael, Sr., who had contracted with Vandiver to haul cement for five cents a ton mile, was obtained from Cameron Joyce at the end of the day or week; that when rainstorms interfered with the hauling operation, Vandiver, in order to protect the cement on loaded trucks, instructed all drivers to park their trucks in garage space which he had borrowed at Liberty, Missouri; that he paid the operators of trucks not owned by him five cents a ton mile for hauling the cement; that they were doing the same work that his own trucks were doing; that he could have dispensed with the trucks not owned by him at any time, whether he needed them or not; that under Vandiver’s arrangement with Michael, Sr., for hauling at five cents a ton mile, Michael, Sr., paid *106 for the gas, oil, repairs and other expenses connected with his trucks; that he designated who would drive his trucks; that it made no difference to Vandiver who drove a truck as long as the driver had a union card; that Michael, Sr., could substitute drivers; that he or his drivers could pick the shortest route to be used from Randolph to the mixing plants and return; that if Michael, Sr., “wanted to leave early on a day at the end of any load, he could do so”; that Vandiver did not pay any social security taxes for Michael, Sr., or for his son, and did not deduct any “withholding tax on” Michael, Sr., or his drivers; that the Michaels were not on the Vandiver payroll; that Michael, Sr., had to pay the license on his trucks; that there was no agreement that he was to haul any given number of loads a day; that when a truck was parked under cover because of bad weather, Michael and the other hauling contractors “did not get any money”; that Michael and his son were not paid for time they were not driving a truck; that when Van-diver’s own trucks were not operating he did not pay the drivers; and that he paid his own employees for operating his trucks by the hour, and paid social security taxes on those drivers.

The evidence of Edward A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 F.2d 103, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-e-knight-v-cameron-joyce-and-company-a-corporation-and-jewell-e-ca8-1958.