Embler v. Gloucester Lumber Co.

167 N.C. 457
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 167 N.C. 457 (Embler v. Gloucester Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Embler v. Gloucester Lumber Co., 167 N.C. 457 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating tbe case: The real and essential question in tbis case is whether Jesse Y. Allen, at tbe time of tbe accident which caused tbe death of plaintiffs’ intestates, was an independent contractor and chargeable with sole responsibility therefor.

Tbe defendant requested that several instructions be given to tbe jury which in substance were equivalent to a motion to nonsuit or a peremptory direction to find for tbe defendant. We will so consider them, without reproducing them severally here. If there was evidence that Jesse Y. Allen was not an independent contractor, tbe instructions should not have been givenj and, therefore, were properly refused by tbe court.

Tbe evidence of both parties tended to show that Jesse Y. Allen entered into a verbal contract with tbe defendant, through J. S. Silver-stein, its president and general manager, to lay tbe brick in tbe walls of tbe dry-kiln at either $3.25 or $2.75 per thousand, tbe evidence as to tbe amount being conflicting. Allen was to look after tbe employment of bands to work on tbe job, tbe wages paid them to be deducted from tbe contract price for laying tbe brick. Tbe defendant was to furnish all of tbe material for tbe construction of tbe walls. It was also shown by tbe evidence of both parties that tbe defendant turned over to Allen a blue-print containing plans and specifications for tbe construction of tbe walls of tbe kiln. These plans and specifications provided, among other things, for a concrete foundation for tbe walls of said kiln, the same to be 24 inches wide and 18 inches high, but did not provide for pilasters to be put on tbe walls.

Plaintiffs’ witness J. Y. Allen testified that tbe base was to be of concrete,. under the ground, but was built of brick under tbe orders of Sil-verstein. He told Silverstein that be noticed on tbe blue-print that it was to be a concrete base, and that it ought to go in under tbe building, and be, Silverstein, said, “Put in brick.” He also testified that Silver-[460]*460.stein ordered bim to put up some- pilasters on tbe sides of tbe walls. That Silverstein, or defendant’s superintendent, were around looking after tbe work a number of times. Mr. Bowman, wbo was employed by tbe defendant and bad charge of its office, was around two or three times •'every day. That in paying tbe bands they signed Mr. Silverstein’s payroll, and tbe witness gave some orders. That tbe blue-print showed tbe bricks were to be laid on a cement foundation, but Mr. Silverstein •changed tbe foundation and decided to put in a brick foundation instead, and ordered Allen to do so. That Silverstein was present a number of times and gave orders in regard to tbe construction of tbe walls.

Herbert Allen, a witness for plaintiffs, testified: "When they went there to work, Mr. Silverstein stated to them to go ahead and put in a 'brick foundation instead of concrete. Witness’s brother told Mr. Silver-,stein that tbe concrete base ought to go in. Mr. Silverstein said tbe brick would do, and Jesse said, “You are tbe doctor; we will put it in that way if you say so.” That while be was at work on this building, be •saw Mi'. Bowman there every day, once or twice a day. Mr. Bowman was giving orders about one thing and another. He laid out some work there; placed off tbe rods that were elevated for tbe track to go through the dry-kiln; that be followed bis directions. He saw Mr. Silverstein there several times during the progress of tbe work. He came to see bow it was getting along and gave orders; that be got bis pay by signing Mr. Silverstein’s pay-roll, and was paid off in checks of tbe Gloucester Lumber Company; that tbe other laborers got their pay in tbe same manner.”

Sibley Allen, a witness for tbe plaintiffs, testified: “I beard a conversation between Mr. Silverstein and Mr. Bowman and my brother; be would come around and discuss what to do and tell bim to go ahead and put it in like be said.”

As tbe intestates were killed by the falling of the walls of tbe kiln which was then being constructed' for tbe defendant, it would be liable in damages to tbe plaintiffs, provided there was negligence which proximately caused tbe wall to fall. If there is anything, then, that relieves •the defendant of this liability, it is, under tbe ordinary rule of law, incumbent upon it to so allege and prove, as this is entirely defensive matter. It follows that, as to tbe defense that the work was being done by an independent contractor, the burden was upon tbe defendant to •show that fact. 26 Cyc., pp. 1573-4; Midgett v. Mfg. Co., 150 N. C., 333; Sutton v. Lyon, 156 N. C., 3 ; Mitchell v. Whitlock, 121 N. C., 166; Cook v. Guirkin, 119 N. C., 13.

This Court has held that in the trial of causes in which the defendant ¡seeks to avoid liability upon the ground that the party in charge of tbe work is an independent contractor, it is proper “to submit the question [461]*461raised by the contention of the defendant in this respect to the jury in a separate issue or question. Young v. Lumber Co., 147 N. C., 35. As this issue is raised by the defendant in its answers, the burden is upon it to sustain its allegation by the greater weight of the evidence. It is elementary that the burden of proof rests upon the party having the affirmative of the issue, and if a defendant, in cases of this kind, alleges an independent contract, the facts pertaining thereto being peculiarly within his knowledge, the law and justice require that he establish the alleged contract to the satisfaction of the jury by the greater weight of the evidence. It would be unfair, and work a hardship, if the burden should be put upon the plaintiff of disproving an alleged contract to which he is an entire stranger.

It is well settled that when the court is asked to give a peremptory instruction to the jury, requiring them to find for one of the parties, the other is entitled to have the evidence considered in the light most favorable to him (Hodges v. R. R., 122 N. C., 992; Board of Education v. Makeley, 139 N. C., 31), which principle has been approved in many subsequent eases. Denny v. Burlington, 155 N. C., 33 (an independent contractor case).

Whether Jesse V. Allen was an independent contractor, for whose negligence the defendant was not responsible to the plaintiffs, presented an issue of fact which was properly left to the jury for decision, as the court could not, in the state of the evidence, pass upon this question as One of law. There was conflicting evidence which clearly made a case for the jury. If the terms of the contract had been admitted or otherwise established, their meaning would become a question of law; but as this contract was in parol and its terms were not settled, and there was conflicting evidence as to what was said and done, it was naturally and legally the function of the jury to draw the necessary deductions therefrom, under proper instructions from the court as to what would constitute Jesse Y. Allen an independent contractor, for whose acts of negligence defendant would not be responsible, with reference, of course, to the peculiar circumstances. An independent contractor is said to be one who, exercising an independent employment, contracts to do a piece of work according to his own judgment and methods, and without being subject to his employer, except as to the result of the work, and who has the right to employ and direct the action of the workmen, independently of such employer and freed from any superior authority in him to say how the specified work shall be done or what the laborers shall do as it progresses. 1 Bouvier’s Law Dict., p.

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167 N.C. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/embler-v-gloucester-lumber-co-nc-1914.