Fear v. Ebony Paint Mfg. Co.

181 S.W.2d 559, 238 Mo. App. 560, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 230
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 559 (Fear v. Ebony Paint Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fear v. Ebony Paint Mfg. Co., 181 S.W.2d 559, 238 Mo. App. 560, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 230 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*563 BLAND, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court affirming an award of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission. The award was in favor of the claimants, but feeling that it was not sufficient in amount, they have appealed.

The facts show that Richard Eugene Rozzell, who lacked approximately one month of being twenty-one years of age, met with .an accidental death on June 1, 1942, while painting the inside of a large water tank standing on a high elevated structure at the plant of the Cudahay Packing Company, in Kansas City, Kansas. The tank had a capacity of 100,000 gallons. It was twenty-two feet in diameter,, forty-five feet high, and stood on a structure 185 feet high. The claimants are the mother of deceased - and his minor brothers and sisters. The defendants filed an amended answer to claimants’ amended claim, denying that the deceased was an employee of the Ebony Paint Manufacturing Company or, that the claimants were, in any way, dependent upon deceased.

The facts further show that the Ebony Paint Manufacturing Company (hereinafter referred to as the’ Manufacturing Company) is a paint manufacturer, located in this State. It occasionally takes contracts to paint and scrape elevated structures, using its products for such purposes. Its operations come within the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Missouri. The Travelers Insurance Company is its insurance carrier. On or about April 23, 1942, the Manufacturing Company contracted with the Cudahay Packing Company, to scrape and paint both the inside and the outside of the tank in question and its supporting metal structure. The Manufacturing Company then had in its employ one Paul and Charles Stevenson, brothers, who did various work for it. When Paul Stevenson worked at his regular job for the Manufacturing Company, as a roofer, he would be paid sixty cents per hour. When the Stevenson brothers worked for the Manufacturing Company as high painters, that is, painting water towers and structural steel, they usually did so on a contract basis. In this' instance they agreed to do the labor of scraping and painting the tower, including the tank, for $218. The Manufacturing Company was to receive a larger sum from the Cudahay Packing Company for the entire job.

*564 Paul Stevenson testified that he and his brother, Charles, started on the Cudahay job in the latter part of May, 1942; that Charles left when the job was about one-fifth completed. Paul Stevenson needed help. The secretary of the Manufacturing Company insisted on two men, at least, being on the job for safety reasons. The secretary told Paul Stevenson to hire some one else to' take the place of his brother, and the latter employed Rozzell, the deceased, to help him on the job, employing him in this State. Rozzell had a small truck which he used in taking materials from the Manufacturing Company’s plant, in this City, to the Cudahay job. Rozzell was hired the last week in May and he worked parts of three days in that month painting the inside of the tank. The paint used on the job had a tar base which was thinned with naphtha. It was impossible for the workmen to work on the inside of the tank for more than four hours per day on account of the fumes emanating from the paint and confined in the tank, there being no provision made for forcing fresh air into the tank. The weather-was hot and in hot weather the fumes were “pretty bad”.

Paul Stevenson testified that four hours would not constitute a day’s work on the outside of the tank but was as many hours as could be put in on any one day on the inside; that Rozzell worked three full four-hour days on the inside of the tank, and had worked about forty-five minutes on the fourth day, when his death occurred. At that time Paul Stevenson and Rozzell had entered the tank and were working down near the bottom and had been there about forty-five miniites when Paul Stevenson became unconscious from the fumes. That is the last he remembered. Rozzell was dead when removed from the tank.

There is a dispute in the testimony as to the amount of wages that deceased earned, and was paid, during the time he worked in the tank. Claimants insist that he was paid $15 and defendants $12. The time book of the Manufacturing Company, on a page headed “Paul Stevenson” under date of “5/29/42”, appears “Stevenson $25”, and following that immediately appears ‘ ‘ Richard J. Rozzell, 3 days, $12. ’ ’ A further .notation appears on the page under date of 6/11 “Rozzell, $3.00”.

After the death of Rozzell the secretary of the Manufacturing Company paid the mother of deceased $3. Claimants insist that all of this shows that deceased received $15 for his work. However, the secretary of the Manufacturing Company testified that he issued one check to Paul Stevenson of which “$12 was for the payment to Richard Rozzell for the work he did during that week”; that he did not know the rate of deceased’s pay; that the money was turned over to Paul Stevenson apparently because Stevenson told the witness that $12 was coming to the deceased.

Stevenson testified that he received the money from the Manufacturing Company but that he paid Rozzell only $9; that the secretary gave $3 to deceased’s mother. The secretary testified that he paid deceased’s *565 mother this $3 on June 11th on the authorization of Paul Stevenson: The Manufacturing Company made a report to the Missouri Unemployment Commission, in which it stated that Rozzell was paid $15; that the date of his separation from its employ was 6/1/42.

It appears that the defendants took a statement from the claimant, Ora May Rozzell Fear and, upon cross-examination by the defendants, she was asked if she did not say in this statement, to the effect, that when deceased was .employed Paul Stevenson told him that he would pay him $1 per hour and, whether she stated in the statement, that Stevenson came to her house “to pay for five of these hours and gave Richard (deceased) $5 in cash”. She answered in the' affirmative.

It appears that Paul Stevenson filed a claim before the Workmen’s Compensation Commission against the Manufacturing Company. The Company filed a report in that ease, stating that he was a painter employed by it “painting inside water tank”. It also stated that he was a ‘ ‘ piece ’ ’ worker, and not a ‘ ‘ time ’ ’ worker ‘ ‘ with a 5-day week ’ ’; that his daily wage was $8.

The secretary of the Manufacturing Company testified that he stated, in the report, that Paul Stevenson’s wage was $8, but the witness further testified that, for that compensation, Stevenson would work eight hours.

Claimants’ witness, Schwartz, testified that he was the business agent for the Painters District Council, American Federation of Labor, in the Kansas City and the metropolitan area including Kansas City, Kansas, and that the prevailing wage scale generally paid to painters working on elevated structures in both Kansas Cities on June 1, 1942, .was $1,625 per hour or $13 for an eight-hour day and that eight hours was the prevailing working day.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 559, 238 Mo. App. 560, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fear-v-ebony-paint-mfg-co-moctapp-1944.