Francis v. Franklin Cafeteria, Inc.

195 A. 198, 123 Conn. 320
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 5, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 195 A. 198 (Francis v. Franklin Cafeteria, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Francis v. Franklin Cafeteria, Inc., 195 A. 198, 123 Conn. 320 (Colo. 1937).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The question determinative of this appeal is whether the plaintiff’s decedent, Julius R. Francis, was at his death an employee or an independent contractor. It is undisputed that the named plaintiff is his dependent widow within the Compensation Act, and that he was burned to death on November 20th, 1936, while working on the defendant’s premises cleaning a ventilating shaft. The finding as amended by the slight corrections to which, only, the plaintiff is entitled, contains these further material facts: The defendant has long conducted a restaurant in Hartford. As part of its ventilating system a shaft three feet in diameter leads from above the kitchen ovens to the outer air. To keep this functioning properly it is necessary at regular intervals to clean out the refuse which accumulates upon the sides thereof. This is an essential part in maintaining the defendant’s business.

The decedent for years engaged in ordinary work *322 taking odd jobs wherever he could find them. He sought work pointing and cleaning chimneys, and as a further activity cleaned out ventilating shafts in restaurants. He had no regular place of business, telephone, bill-heads, cards, or other outward indication that he was engaged in any regular business, except as inferable from his efforts in going from place to place seeking to do specific jobs. On at least one previous occasion he had done the job of cleaning this shaft of the defendant. Shortly before his death he had performed this kind of work for the Lobster Grill and for the Sea Food Restaurant in Hartford. For the latter the owner paid him a price fixed by contract. On November 20th, 1936, the decedent entered the defendant’s premises and solicited the job of cleaning out the shaft at the agreed price of $25. Upon suggestion from the defendant’s manager that the price was high, the decedent responded that he would have to employ two helpers and buy necessary supplies of gasoline and powder. Thereupon the defendant, through its manager, gave the job to the decedent without further instruction, except that the work be properly done. The job was a simple one requiring no special skill or tools. On several previous occasions it had been done by the defendant’s regular employees. To avoid interfering with defendant’s business, it was agreed that the decedent should do the work after business hours on the night of November 20th, and finish the job before business commenced the next morning.. He was instructed that if this proved impossible, he would be told when to return to complete it. The decedent secured Valentine Nelligan only to help him on the job, agreeing to pay him something for spending money. Nelligan had helped him on similar jobs before in a like capacity. The decedent purchased gasoline, and used for containers abandoned cans found *323 in the restaurant. His tools consisted of a putty knife which he purchased for ten cents and a scrubbing brush for twenty cents. He purchased powder also to be used in the performance of the work. The decedent used a ladder which was in the restaurant, furnished by the defendant, to climb up into the shaft which is some distance above the floor. He also used rags found in the restaurant, given him by an employee of the defendant.

The decedent and Nelligan arrived at the job twenty minutes before they actually began work, the defendant’s manager instructing them to wait until the kitchen help left, which they did. The manager gave the decedent a key of the premises and told him when the work was done to hang it at a designated place that the regular employees might use it to open for* business in the morning. To provide light in the shaft while at work, the decedent used an electric light attached to a switch owned by the defendant. He began work about 8.30 p.m. and continued until about 10 p.m., when apparently he in some way broke the bulb of the electric light causing the gasoline fumes to ignite, enveloping him in flames, and burning him so severely that death resulted a few hours later.

The commissioner further found that the defendant exercised no control over the decedent in the performance of his work; did not direct his movements in any manner; did not control the method to be adopted by him, except as to the result, and that all the elements existed constituting him an independent contractor. He therefore concluded that the decedent was not an employee within the contemplation of the Compensation Act, as claimed by the plaintiff, but was an independent contractor.

"An independent contractor is one who, exercising an independent employment, contracts to do a piece *324 of work according to his own methods and without being subject to the control of his employer, except as to the result of his work.” 2 Cooley, Torts (3d Ed.) 1098. Since approving this definition in Alexander v. Sherman’s Sons Co., 86 Conn. 292, 297, 85 Atl. 514, we have amplified it in applying the principle in other cases: “When the doing of a specific piece of work is entrusted to one who exercises an independent employment and selects his own help and has the immediate control of them, and the right to control the method of conducting such work, the contractor is an independent contractor. . . . The decisive test is who has the right to direct what shall be done and when and how it shall be done? Who has the right of general control?” Thompson v. Twiss, 90 Conn. 444, 447, 97 Atl. 328. “Whatever the other conditions of a contract may be, if, in its essential features, it provides that the employer retain no control over the details of the work, but leaves to the other party the determination of the manner of doing it, without subjecting him to the control of the employer, the party undertaking to do the work is a contractor and not a mere employee.” Aisenberg v. Adams Co., Inc., 95 Conn. 419, 423, 111 Atl. 591. “The independent contractor contracts to produce a given result by methods under his control, while the employee contracts to produce a given result subject to the lawful orders and control of the employer in the means and methods used; these point in some degree to the duty of service to the employer.” Tortorici v. Moosop, Inc., 107 Conn. 143, 146, 139 Atl. 642.

The finding shows that the decedent was exercising the independent employment of cleaning restaurant ventilating shafts; that he contracted for the agreed price of $25 to clean the defendant’s ventilating shaft according to his own method involving the use of gaso *325 line, powder, putty knife and brush; that he selected his own helper, Nelligan, over whom he had immediate control; and that he was not subject to the control of the defendant with regard to the work except as to the result. It establishes, in short, that in so far as the job of cleaning this shaft was concerned the decedent and not the defendant, had the right to direct what was to be done, and how it was to be done, and so had the right of general control. The commissioner therefore was correct in concluding that the decedent was an independent contractor and not an employee. Thompson v. Twiss, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 198, 123 Conn. 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francis-v-franklin-cafeteria-inc-conn-1937.