Findley v. Flanigan

373 P.2d 551, 84 Idaho 473, 1962 Ida. LEXIS 236
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1962
Docket9130
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 373 P.2d 551 (Findley v. Flanigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Findley v. Flanigan, 373 P.2d 551, 84 Idaho 473, 1962 Ida. LEXIS 236 (Idaho 1962).

Opinions

SMITH, Chief Justice.

Claimant-appellant is hereinafter designated as claimant. Respondent employer is hereinafter sometimes referred to as the Company, and the Industrial Accident Board as the Board.

The crucial issues involved on this appeal are whether claimant timely notified his statutory employer, respondent A & B Cedar Company; or whether such employer had timely knowledge of an accident which occurred on December 2, 1960, and [476]*476of claimant’s resultant industrial injury, and whether the Company’s rights were prejudiced. The Board, having resolved the issues against claimant, denied him compensation. Appellant’s assignments of error require a review of the evidence to determine whether it is sufficient to sustain the Board’s determination.

Claimant Findley followed logging since 1945 until about three years prior to the time of hearing herein; during the three-year period last mentioned he was a logging contractor, conducting his own business, with his own equipment. Occasionally he hired out as a “caterpillar” operator.

A & B Cedar Company is a partnership having no equipment except as necessary to manufacture shakes. It does not own logging equipment. Prior to the events of this case, the Company had neither owned nor leased any source of timber. It bought shake bolts in the open market for cash on delivery to its mill.

In September, 1960, at one McCoy’s solicitation the Company purchased for $220 certain standing timber which would yield both shakes and cedar posts. McCoy, having the requisite equipment, agreed to relieve the Company of the woods operation and hauling.

The Company’s inducement for the agreement was the expectation of receiving upwards to 20 cords of shake bolts from its investment of $220 and furnishing a $100 bond incident to the transaction; the Company actually received 17l/£ cords which at the open market price were worth $568.75. McCoy’s inducement for the agreement was his expectation of obtaining 20,000 to 30,000 cedar posts; the actual yield was about 10,000 posts.

During the late fall of 1960 McCoy entered the timber area with his equipment and four employees, and commenced the timber operations. Later, about December 1, 1960, McCoy hired claimant as a member of his crew to- build a skid road and haul the shake bolts. Claimant furnished his own equipment, a “Caterpillar” tractor equipped with a blade, for constructing the roads, and his pickup truck for hauling the shake bolts.

The evening of December 2, 1960, after having worked on the road, claimant- left the timber area, intending to go to his home, driving his own pickup truck loaded with shake bolts for delivery to the Company’s mill at Stites. When about 20 to 25 miles from the timber area, and 40 to 45 miles from his home, his pickup truck ran off the road, down an embankment into a pile of loose dirt. Claimant had slipped down between the steering wheel and the door, when the truck came to a sudden stop. He drove the truck back onto the road, and the remaining distance over partially improved and partially unimproved roads to his home. He had difficulty getting out of [477]*477the pickup, experiencing a feeling of sprain in his hack. He remained at home the next few days; then he visited a physician in Lewiston, where he was hospitalized until December 28, 1960, then he was transported by ambulance to a hospital in Spokane. Examinations showed that he suffered extensive arthritic changes in his lumbar and dorsal spine. An operation performed revealed a bony ridge on the upper sacrum and the lower ridge of the fifth lumbar vertebra, with some fragmented disc material beneath a nerve root in that area.

Claimant incurred medical and hospital expenses, part of which were paid by his own private insurance carrier. He also suffered a period of total temporary disability for work and a degree of partial permanent disability. The Board apportioned one-half of the medical expenses, total temporary disability and partial permanent disability to the accidental industrial injury and one-half to pre-existing infirmity.

Claimant made claim for compensation against respondent A & B Cedar Company, and its compensation surety. His Notice of Injury and Claim for Compensation is dated February 25, 1961, and was filed with the Board March 1, 1961. He claimed to be a direct employee of the Company. He did not make claim for compensation against Gene McCoy.

The Board, upon hearing the matter, found inter alia that at the time of his industrial injury claimant’s direct employer was Gene McCoy; that Gene McCoy was an independent contractor of respondent A & B Cedar Company; that the Company was the statutory employer; that claimant had failed to give timely notice to the statutory employer against which he asserted his claim; that the Company did not have timely knowledge of claimant’s accident and injury, and that the Company was prejudiced by such delay or want of notice. The Board entered an order denying compensation to claimant. He perfected an appeal from the order.

Claimant’s specifications, claiming error committed by the Board, necessitate a review of the evidence as it relates to: (1), relationships existing between the parties, i. e., claimant, McCoy and respondent Company at the time of the accident; (2), whether respondent Company as employer, statutory or otherwise, had timely notice or knowledge of the accident and injury, and (3) whether the Company as such employer was prejudiced by delay or want of notice.

Relationship Between McCoy and Claimant.

Claimant had no direct contractual relations with respondent Company, nor had he talked with any of its partners. His dealings and agreement relative to the services of himself and his equipment, and pursuant to which he performed the serv[478]*478ices, were with McCoy, who testified that claimant was one of his (McCoy’s) crew in the timber operations. McCoy expected to pay his crew out of the proceeds of sale of cedar posts, claimant to be paid on a percentage basis.

Claimant, like McCoy, was a logging contractor, and generally hired as a contractor; but here the evidence shows without dispute that he was hired as a member of McCoy’s crew. Claimant expected to realize some $40 to $50 a day for hire of his equipment, and additionally the going wage for a caterpillar operator.

Claimant had never done any logging work for respondent Company. He knew that the Company operated only the shake mill at Stites, near the vicinity of Kooskia, where he lived, and had never engaged in any logging work. His testimony shows that he knew that the Company and its operations were of recent origin. In operating his equipment on jobs, claimant reported the source of his income to be from his own business.

The evidence is ample to support the finding of the Board that McCoy was claimant’s direct employer.

Relationship Between McCoy and Respondent Company.

The evidence shows that McCoy was a logging contractor who owned his own logging equipment, hiring and paying his own crew of employees. Respondent Company during the relatively short space of its existence had operated only its shake mill at Stites. It had no logging equipment and had never engaged in logging operations. The situs of its operations was solely and only at its shake mill. It purchased shake bolts on the open market.

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

Related

Smith v. Excel Fabrication, LLC
535 P.3d 1098 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2023)
Gonzalez v. Lamb Weston, Inc.
124 P.3d 996 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2005)
Williamson v. Werner Enterprises, Inc.
682 N.W.2d 723 (Nebraska Court of Appeals, 2004)
Spencer v. Allpress Logging, Inc.
11 P.3d 475 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2000)
Taylor v. Soran Restaurant, Inc.
960 P.2d 1254 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1998)
Kiele v. Steve Henderson Logging
905 P.2d 82 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1995)
Murray-Donahue v. National Car Rental Licensee Ass'n
900 P.2d 1348 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1995)
Neufeld v. Browning Ferris Industries
712 P.2d 600 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1985)
Tucker v. Union Oil Co. of California
603 P.2d 156 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1979)
Troutner v. Traffic Control Company
547 P.2d 1130 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1976)
Christensen v. Calico Construction & Development Co.
543 P.2d 1167 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1975)
Kennedy v. EVERGREEN LOGGING COMPANY
543 P.2d 495 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1975)
Facer v. ER Steed Equipment Company
514 P.2d 841 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1973)
Garren v. JR Simplot Company
463 P.2d 558 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1969)
Scott v. Aslett Construction Company
452 P.2d 61 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1968)
McBride v. JR Simplot Company
441 P.2d 723 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1968)
Christensen v. West
437 P.2d 359 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1968)
Findley v. Flanigan
373 P.2d 551 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
373 P.2d 551, 84 Idaho 473, 1962 Ida. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/findley-v-flanigan-idaho-1962.