Grief v. Industrial Accident Fund

93 P.2d 961, 108 Mont. 519, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 116
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1939
DocketNo. 7,939.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 93 P.2d 961 (Grief v. Industrial Accident Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grief v. Industrial Accident Fund, 93 P.2d 961, 108 Mont. 519, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 116 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

*522 MR. JUSTICE ERICKSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Carbon county. The respondent, Sirs. Marjorie Grief, filed an application with the Industrial Accident Board for compensation arising out of the death of her husband, Robert Grief. The decedent was engaged in operating a garage and service station in the city of Red Lodge. On September 5, 1936, the J. L. McLaughlin Construction Company, operating under Plan 3 of the *523 Workmen’s Compensation Act, was engaged through an employee in moving certain equipment on the highway from Cook to Plentywood, Montana. The equipment consisted of a three-ton International truck on which was mounted an oil distributor, a trailer being pulled by the truck on which was mounted a boiler which was used for the purpose of heating oil for application on the road. When the equipment was on the highway near Roberts, Montana, the trailer became unhooked from the distributor truck and turned over into the ditch. One William Eastman was the employee of the construction company who was driving the oil distributor. He had full power under circumstances such as these to employ persons to assist him. He found it impossible to right the boiler and employed one Ted Hendricksen, who furnished blocks, chains and jacks, to assist him in doing so. They could not right the boiler and get it back on the highway. They then went to Roberts and ’phoned the decedent. The latter operated a wrecker service in connection with his garage. In the ’phone conversation with the decedent he was asked by Eastman what he would charge to assist Eastman in placing the boiler back on the highway. In reply decedent stated it would cost about $6. As a result of the conversation the decedent proceeded with his wrecker to the place of the accident. By the combined use of the wrecker and the distributor truck, the boiler was righted, and the decedent made some effort to pull it back on the highway with his wrecker but was unable to do so. He then pulled his wrecker to the opposite side of the highway and parked it in the ditch, while Eastman attached the distributor truck to the trailer. When Eastman hooked onto the trailer, Hendricksen took a position in front of the truck, it being in the night-time, to signal persons using the highway to prevent collision. The decedent was given a flashlight by Eastman and he took up a position at the rear of the truck for the purpose of signaling travelers and for the additional purpose of informing Eastman as to the progress he was making in pulling the trailer out of the ditch. As the trailer was being pulled out, an automobile ran into the decedent who, as a result of the injuries sustained, died. •

*524 The decedent’s widow, the respondent here, as stated above, filed an application for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, and, upon hearing, her application was denied. Subsequently a rehearing was granted and held, and again the application was denied. Appeal was taken to the district court. The matter was submitted to that court on the records of the hearings before the Industrial Accident Board, the testimony taken at the inquest, and various exhibits introduced in the previous hearings. Judgment was entered in favor of the respondent, and it is from that judgment this appeal is taken.

The several assignments of error are all based on the single question as to the status of the decedent with relation to the construction company at the time of the accident. It is the contention of the Industrial Accident Board that the decedent was an independent contractor, and not an employee or servant of the construction company. With this view we cannot agree.

This court on a number of occasions has defined an “independent contractor.” Several of these definitions have been cited by both the appellant and the respondent. A leading case defining the term is Allen v. Bear Creek Coal Co., 43 Mont. 269, 115 Pac. 673 : ‘ ‘ The relation of the parties under a contract of employment is determined by an answer to the question: Does the employee in doing the work submit himself to the direction of the employer, both as to the details of it and the means by which it is accomplished? If he does he is a servant and not an independent contractor.” A more recent case to the same effect is Shope v. City of Billings, 85 Mont. 302, 278 Pac. 826, and the most recent ease discussing the question of independent contractor is Greening v. Gazette Printing Co., ante, p. 158, 88 Pac. (2d) 862.

From the testimony in the present ease, it appears that control over the activity of the decedent during all of the time he was assisting in the righting of the boiler rested in Eastman, the employee and representative of the construction company. He had tried for some time with the aid of Hendricksen to right the trailer and, as he testified, he was in full control then. *525 When asked specifically as to whether he turned the work over to decedent after the latter arrived, he said there was nothing said about it. Several references are made in the testimony and the record to the fact that the decedent was assisting Eastman. In a letter written by J. L. McLaughlin, the president of the construction company, made a part of the record, he states that the decedent was called to “assist in clearing a wreck * * . It was while assisting to clear this wreck that Mr. Grief was struck.” The record shows that in righting the boiler the construction company’s truck was also used. Under the Shope Case, supra, where the facts were that the contractor retained control, the mere fact that the city furnished trucks and assistance was held not sufficient to constitute the contractor a mere employee. The mere furnishing of assistance by the company to the decedent would not be sufficient to make him an independent contractor if there were circumstances to show otherwise.

The appellant stresses the fact that the decedent was engaged in an independent business which included the operation of a wrecker service. That fact would tend to indicate that usually the decedent would act as an independent contractor. But he might be an independent contractor in 95 per cent, of the cases where he used his wrecker, and a mere employee in the other 5 per cent. Whether he is an employee or an independent contractor depends in each case upon the fact, primarily, as to the matter of control by the employer.

Ordinarily, an agreement in advance as to the price of the exact service to be performed is an indication of the independent contractor relationship. If the agreed price is for the securing of a certain result without regard to the length of time consumed in its performance, there is a strong indication of independent contractor relationship. The record does not reveal that payment to the decedent was dependent upon getting the trailer on the road. It shows that he merely agreed to help Eastman in doing so. Eastman testified that after both the wrecker and his truck were hooked to the boiler, “I could not pull it, could not set it up. ’ ’

*526 It is to be noted here that there never was an agreed price.

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Bluebook (online)
93 P.2d 961, 108 Mont. 519, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grief-v-industrial-accident-fund-mont-1939.