Harris Meat & Produce Co. v. Brown

1936 OK 460, 59 P.2d 280, 177 Okla. 317, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1936
DocketNo. 26697.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1936 OK 460 (Harris Meat & Produce Co. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris Meat & Produce Co. v. Brown, 1936 OK 460, 59 P.2d 280, 177 Okla. 317, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 666 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an original proceeding in this court brought by Harris Meat & Produce Company and Equity Mutual Insurance Company, as petitioners, to obtain the review of an award made by the State Industrial Commission in favor of the respondent Henry G. Brown.

The respondent on February 11, 1935, while engaged in repairing certain refrigerating machinery for the petitioner Harris Meat & Produce Company sustained an accidental injury resulting in the total loss of vision of one eye and a 20 per cent, loss of vision in the other. .The injury and extent thereof is not an issue here. Petitioners furnished medical attention and paid compensation at the rate of $10.27 per week to the respondent during the period of his temporary total disability resulting from the accident. Respondent applied for compensation on account of permanent partial disability. Hearings were held on this application and on September 14, 1935, the commission entered the order and made the award, which order was amended in minor respects by order of September 21, 1935, and which we are now called upon to review. Petitioners attack only the finding of the commission relative to the status of the respondent and the finding as to respondent’s average daily wage.

The petitioners urge first that respondent was an independent contractor and not an employee within the terms and meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. In suit-port of this contention we are cited to Southern Const. Co. v. State Industrial Commission, 112 Okla. 248, 240 P. 613; Evans v. State Industrial Commission, 161 Okla. 288, 18 P. (2d) 885; Utility Coal Co. v. Rogez, 170 Okla. 264, 39 P. (2d) 60; Ludlow v. State Industrial Commission (Utah) 235 P. 884; Tahona Smokeless Coal Co. v. State Industrial Commission, 128 Okla. 188, 261 P. 941; Midland Oil & Gas Co. v. Creel, 89 Okla. 23, 213 P. 852; Producers’ Lumber Co. v. Butler, 87 Okla. 172, 209 P. 738; Fox v. Dunning et al., 124 Okla. 228, 255 P. 582. We have carefully examined all of the above-cited decisions, but we find ourselves unable, under the record before us in this case, to place ihereon the interpretation sought by the petitioners. The salient portions of the record essential to an understanding of the case at bar disclose substantially the following situation; The respondent was an employee of an ice company in capacity of engineer, and had been so emp’oyed for several years prior to the date of the injury. Ho was not engaged in doing work generally for others and did not carry on a contracting- business. However, it appears that some *318 time prior to the date of his injury he had assisted another party in doing some work for the petitioner; that the petitioner through its owner and manager requested respondent to come to their place of business and on his arrival informed him that they had a leak in their refrigerating system ; that its manager gave him some slight assistance in locating the leak, made some suggestions in regard thereto, and gave a few general directions and left the respondent to make the necessary repairs; that no discussion of the terms or conditions of employment was had, but that apparently the petitioner expected the respondent to give his personal services and attention in making the repairs; that respondent attempted to do the work, but had continued thereat but a short time before the accident happened; that the work was of a mechanical and manual nature involving the use of some very simple tools, chiefly wrenches, and was not of a nature whieh would require continued control and supervision; that respondent was to receive 70 cents per hour for his services; that in addition to his wages as an engineer with the ice company respondent had also done certain work as a bookkeeper for which he had received $125 during the preceding year; that his wages as an engineer and in the line of work in whieh he was injured had amounted to the sum of $859 53 during the year preceding his injury.

In the cases cited by petitioners, and numerous other decisions of this- court not cited, we have had occasion to distinguish independent contractors, servants, agents, and employees, and we have repeatedly held that where an individual is in fact an independent contractor, he may not recover compensation from the employer under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of this state. However, as said in the case of Getman-McDonell-Summers Drug Co. v. Acosta, 162 Okla. 77, 19 P. (2d) 149:

“Many authorities are cited by both plaintiff and defendant, but the authorities so cited are in sharp conflict and cannot be reconciled. For that reason we do not attempt to distinguish the particular cases cited. This court, in the case of Hamilton v. Okla. Trading Co., 33 Okla. 81, 124 P. 38, holds:
“ ‘As a general rule the line of demarcation between an independent contractor and a servant is one not clearly drawn by the courts. The question must be determined upon the facts peculiar to each ease.’
“With the above announced rule we agree, and we do not attempt to lay down any particular rule by whieh an agent or servant can be distinguished from an independent contractor.
“Practically all of the authorities, in discussing this question, lay down the general broad rule that in determining whether a person is an agent or an independent contractor, it is necessary to look first to the contract and the practices under it, together with the results to be accomplished. We also find that the following elements are considered in determining whether a party is an agent or an independent contractor: (1) The degree of control exercised by the employer, or the independence enjoyed by the contractor or agent: (2) whether the party is to be paid by the job or is to receive a certain salary by the day, week 'or month; (3) whether his employment consists solely in working for his employer; (.4) the control that is exercised over him in the method and manner of performing the work; (5) whether the agent uses his own equipment, or whether the equipment, if any, so used is owned and controlled by the owner; and (6) the nature of the contract, whether written or oral.”

See, also, Barnsdall Ref. Co. v. State Industrial Commission, 163 Okla. 154, 21 P. (2d) 749.

In the case at bar we find no particular feature of the evidence which is decisive. However, it is noted that the work in which the respondent was engaged at the time of bis injury was mechanical and manual and of the same nature as that in which he had oeen engaged for more than a year prior to his injury; that the tools required to perform the work were simple; that there was no necessity of continued and strict supervision or control on the part of the employer and that there was no express contract either written or oral between the parties; that the degree of independence reserved by the respondent, if: any, was not definite, but from the testimony, taken as a whole, it is apparent that the parties at the time considered themselves as occupying the relation of emp oyer and employee, and until this proceeding was brought there was no thought by either of the interested parties that any different relation might exist. The Workman’s Compensation Act defines “employee” and “wages” (subdivisions 4 and 8 of section 13350, O. S. 1931). These are correlative terms and must be construed together. Coweta Casing Crew v. Horn, 106 Okla. 138, 233 P. 475.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 460, 59 P.2d 280, 177 Okla. 317, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-meat-produce-co-v-brown-okla-1936.