Hedge v. Williams

63 P. 721, 131 Cal. 455, 82 Am. St. Rep. 366, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1153
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1901
DocketSac. No. 724.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 63 P. 721 (Hedge v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hedge v. Williams, 63 P. 721, 131 Cal. 455, 82 Am. St. Rep. 366, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1153 (Cal. 1901).

Opinions

GAROUTTE, J.

This action was brought by the surviving wife and minor children, for damages occasioned by the death of Joseph A. Hedge, the husband and father. Defendant appeals from the judgment and order denying his motion for a new trial.

The material facts in the case are as follows: Defendant was the owner of a large fruit farm near the town of Porterville. One A. H. Schultz was the superintendent of defendant in the management of the farm. A large tank, used to store distillate, was located upon the premises. Schultz discovered that the tank was leaking, and directed that the distillate be withdrawn therefrom, which was done, with the exception of possibly an inch in depth at the bottom of the tank. Schultz was also a member of the firm of Schultz & Wilson, dealers in hardware, tinware, plumbing, etc., in the town of Porter- *457 ville. One Fontaine was in the employ of Schultz & Wilson, directly in charge of that portion of the business, including the repairing of tanks, etc., and had made this particular tank some j'-ears in the past. Schultz instructed Fontaine to repair the leak in the tank, and took him with his implements of labor to the place where the tank was located. The deceased, Hedge, was the servant of defendant, and was engaged in fixing a easing surrounding the tank. Upon the arrival of Fontaine at the tank he climbed upon it, called for a lighted lantern and a string, opened the manhole, let down the lantern within, and immediately a disastrous explosion occurred. Hedge, Schultz, and Fontaine were all seriously injured. Hedge died; the others recovered. It will be seen from the foregoing statement that the facts are neither many nor complicated; yet the dual capacity in which Schultz was acting—his Jekyll and Hyde character, as it were—adds an additional element of interest to the ease.

It is claimed by appellant that Fontaine stood in the position of an independent contractor. In other words, that Schultz & Wilson stood as independent contractors in repairing the tank and that Fontaine was their servant. It is next claimed that if Fontaine was not the servant of Schultz & Wilson, he was the servant of defendant, and Hedge, being his fellow-servant, Fontaine’s negligence could not form the basis of a recovery by Hedge’s relatives. Of course this contention is sound, unless defendant was guilty of negligence in selecting Fontaine to do the work. We return to the first proposition urged. Did Fontaine stand in the position of an independent contractor? If he did, then the defendant is not liable, for independent contractors alone must bear the damage occasioned by their negligence.

After viewing this evidence from every side, we are brought to the conclusion that Fontaine, in repairing this tank, was not the servant of defendant and that his negligence in causing the explosion was not the negligence of defendant. First let us eliminate Schultz from the case in his dual capacity, and deal with him alone as a member of the firm of Schultz & Wilson. Then we have defendant personally going to the firm *458 of Schultz & Wilson, and requesting that a man be sent out to repair the leaking tank. Defendant may go one step further and request that Fontaine be sent out to repair the tank. Assuredly, Fontaine, under these circumstances, would be the servant of Schultz & Wilson, and not th'e servant of defendant. For nine years Fontaine had been in the employ of Schultz & Wilson, and as their employee he went with his tools to repair the tank. The firm had the power to discharge him at any moment, even at the very moment when the soldering iron was hot in his hand and the solder ready to be applied. He was paid by the firm for his labor. Defendant could hold the firm liable if his work was negligently done. Looking at the case from this angle Fontaine was not the servant of defendant. As the servant of Schultz & Wilson he stood in the position of an independent contractor; and the facts fit the case of Bennett v. Truebody, 66 Cal. 509, 7 where the owner of a building employed a plumber to repair the water pipes; and this plumber was held to be an independent contractor.

Again, let us eliminate Schultz from the case in his character as a dealer in hardware, etc. Then we have him as the superintendent of defendant, requesting the firm of Wilson & Co. to repair this tank; or we may go one step further and say he requested the firm to send out their man Fontaine to repair the tank. Hnder these circumstances Fontaine still would be the servant of Wilson & Co., and to no degree the servant of defendant. In the early English case cited in Bennett v. Truebody, supra, where a butcher hired a drover to drive a bullock, the drover was held to be an independent contractor, and not the servant of the butcher. Coleridge, J., said: “The thing done is the driving. The owner makes the contract with the drover that he shall drive the beast, and leaves it under his charge, and then the drover does the act. The relation of master and servant, therefore, does not exist between them.” It can hardly be claimed that the firm of Wilson & Co. were the servants of the defendant in repairing the tank; yet if they were not defendant’s servants, then their employee, Fontaine, certainly was not.

*459 It seems to follow from the foregoing assumptions that, in the eyes of the law, the dual capacity in which Schultz was acting in no way affects the merits of this litigation. As to the law, the case would he the same if he were alone a member of the hardware firm, or alone the superintendent of the defendant. Schultz’s dual capacity in no way changes the contractual relations between these various parties. Indeed, in no aspect of the case were there any contractual' relations existing between the defendant and Fontaine as to the repairing of the tank. Defendant could not discharge him from the work. Only Schultz & Wilson could do so. Defendant was not paying him for his labor, for Schultz & Wilson were paying him. There being no contractual relation between Fontaine and defendant, it is impossible in law that Fontaine should be the servant of defendant.

Section 2009 of the Civil Code provides: “A servant is one who is employed to render personal service to his employer, otherwise than in the pursuit of an independent calling, and who in such service remains entirely under the control and direction of the latter, who is called his master.” Schultz & Wilson were not the servants of defendant, tested by this section. Defendant could not be termed their master, for they were doing this work in the pursuit of an independent calling; and this being so, they were independent contractors, and Fontaine was their servant. (See Shearman and Redfield on Negligence, sec. 81.) Adam & Kibbe employed McGearey to take down a flagstaff from their building. In an action for damages brought by a third party for injuries received in taking down the flagstaff, it was held that McGearey was an independent contractor, and alone liable. (Ahern v. McGearey, 79 Cal. 44.) That case is similar in principle to the case at bar. (See, also, Callan v. Bull, 113 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
63 P. 721, 131 Cal. 455, 82 Am. St. Rep. 366, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedge-v-williams-cal-1901.