Hayes v. Killinger

385 P.2d 747, 235 Or. 465, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 364
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 385 P.2d 747 (Hayes v. Killinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Killinger, 385 P.2d 747, 235 Or. 465, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 364 (Or. 1963).

Opinion

*467 ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff Dale Hayes, from a judgment of involuntary nonsuit which the circuit court entered in favor of the defendant, Lloyd Wallace. The alleged cause of action which terminated in that manner arose from injuries which the plaintiff sustained when his right arm was caught in a corn picking machine which was operated on Wallace’s farm in Marion County. In addition to Wallace, the complaint made as parties defendant three individuals by the name of Ballinger. It alleged that the four were joint adventurers in harvesting corn and operating the machine. It charged that the four should be held jointly and severally liable for the plaintiff’s injuries. The motion of Wallace for an involuntary nonsuit which was made at the close of the plaintiff’s case in chief was sustained by the trial judge on the ground that the record contained no evidence of a joint adventure. This appeal challenges that ruling. The Killingers are not parties to this appeal.

The defendants Killinger were engaged in the business of farming in Marion County as partners under the name of George Killinger & Sons. Sometime in 1959 or 1960 they purchased a corn picking machine for the purpose of harvesting their own corn crop and operating the machine on a custom picking basis on other farms in the area. The corn picker was a power driven machine mounted on a farm tractor and used for picking the ears of corn from the stalks in the field. Two trucks were required for the continuous and efficient operation of the picker; one operated along side the machine and received the ejected ears of com while the other hauled the corn to the cannery. Defendant Wallace owned a truck and was engaged by the Killingers in 1960 to assist in the custom pick *468 ing operation by providing one of the two- required trucks. ■ ■■•- ■

The farmer whose corn was being harvested was charged a stated price per ton for picking and: hauling the corn — usually- between $5.50 and $6.00: depending on the distance the corn was transported. The Killingers collected the total charge for picking and hauling the corn from the farmer and deposited the receipts in the business account of George Killinger & Sons. They then paid Wallace a stated amount per- ton of corn that he hauled based on “weight slips” that he received from the cannery when the corn was delivered.

Wallace paid all the expenses incidental to his truck — gas, oil, repairs and insurance — and realized as “profit” the amount remaining after his expenses were paid. The Killingers retained the amount collected for picking the corn and the amount paid for hauling by the other truck which they - owned, and operated. The expenses of operating the corn picker and the tractor on which it was mounted' were borne entirely by the Killingers. They calculated their profits by deducting these expenses from the amount collected for picking and hauling. Ralph Killinger testified that they also deducted the amounts paid to Wallace for hauling in determining the profit derived from the corn picking operation. To illustrate this significant point we shall assume that a farmer is charged $6 per ton for picking and hauling his corn. This $6 per ton would be collected by the Killingers who would deduct (1) $2.50 per ton paid to Wallace for the amount of corn he hauled, (2) the expense of operating their truck, and (3) the operating expense of the corn picker and tractor. The remainder, if any, would be the profit derived by the Killingers. There were other minor incidental expenses which the Kil *469 lingers paid such as the expenses of keeping the accounts, of ¡banking the receipts of the operation and of entering into agreements with the farmers ■ to harvest their corn. Wallace, in figuring his gain or loss, would deduct the expense of operating his truck from the $2.50 per ton received from the Killingers.

September 8, 1961, the day of the plaintiff’s injury, the machine was being operated during the hours of darkness with the aid of artificial lighting equipment attached to the machine. The plaintiff, who was hired and paid by the Killingers, rode on a small platform attached to the rear of the picker. His duties consisted of lubricating the machine and, if it became clogged, removing grass, weeds and corn stalks that became impaled on the operating parts. In the instance which resulted in his injury the plaintiff was preparing to unclog the picker when his right arm became entangled .in the operating machinery. Subsequently, he and the Killingers severed his arm with a pocket knife to free him from the machine and he was rushed to a hospital where the amputation was surgically completed.' As a result appellant lost the lower portion of his arm from above the elbow.

Subsequent to the commencement of this action the plaintiff, in consideration of $20,000 executed with the Killingers a covenant not to sue them and to hold them harmless from any judgment that may arise from the injury. He then proceeded against Wallace individually on the theory he was jointly and severally liable.

Defendant Wallace pleaded a separate defense and sought a permanent injunction against the plaintiff’s prosecution of such a cause of action against him. The trial court sustained the plaintiff’s demurrer to this separate defense and Wallace prosecutes a cross- *470 appeal. Since we will affirm the trial court’s disposition of the motion for nonsuit, it is unnecessary to consider the cross-appeal. As the plaintiff admits, Wallace can be liable only if he is a joint adventurer with the Ballingers.

In assessing the trial court’s disposition of the motion for involuntary nonsuit, it is our duty to view the evidence in the light most f avorable to the opponent of the motion.

Plaintiff contends the question of joint adventure should have been submitted to the jury as a question of fact. Preston v. State Industrial Accident Commission, 174 Or 553, 149 P2d 957, quotes with approval the following from 47 CJ 773:

“What will constitute a partnership is a matter of law, but whether the partnership exists under the evidence is one of fact for the jury, unless, in the opinion of the Court, but one inference can be drawn by reasonable men.”

Uniting these principles, we must view the evidence in a light most favorable to the plaintiff to determine whether it justifies the single inference in the minds of reasonable men that a joint adventure did not exist between Wallace and the Killingers in the corn picking operation. The evidence must be viewed in the proper framework of applicable law. Consequently, we must determine what constitutes a joint adventure as a matter of law.

The principal difference between a joint adventure and a partnership is that a partnership is ordinarily formed for the transaction of general business of a particular land while a joint adventure is usually limited to a single transaction. This distinction is of little importance to our deliberations in this case; *471 and although in a strict legal sense the difference does exist, the rules applicable in determining the existence of a partnership form the criteria of existence of a joint adventure. McKee v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
385 P.2d 747, 235 Or. 465, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-killinger-or-1963.