Hinkle v. Allen-Codell Co.

182 S.W.2d 20, 298 Ky. 102, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 841
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 2, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 20 (Hinkle v. Allen-Codell Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinkle v. Allen-Codell Co., 182 S.W.2d 20, 298 Ky. 102, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 841 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion of the Coubt by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellee, Allen-Codell Company, is a corporation organized some four years ago as a subsidiary of another corporation known as the Codell Construction Company. The latter company has for many years been engaged in the business of constructing highways under contracts obtained from public authorities ordering them.

About four years ago it organized the appellee as a subsidiary corporation to furnish labor and material in surfacing highways previously constructed by others. Prior to August 10, 1941, it had obtained a contract for surfacing with asphalt a publicly constructed highway, or a part thereof, located in Johnson County, the work to commence at a point about seven miles from Paintsville, in which city appellee had procured to be placed on a railroad sidetrack cars containing the material to be put upon the highway. It was requisite for it to be hauled by truck from the sidetrack at Paints-ville to the place on the highway where it was to be spread, and under appellee’s contract its spreading work was .to commence on the morning of August 11, 1941. The location of appellee’s headquarters and the storage building for its trucks were in the town of Winchester, something over 100 miles from Paintsville.

Appellee had in its employ a faithful and industrious, as well as loyal, servant by the name of James Hinkle, the husband of appellant, Matilda Hinkle. The home of the couple was in Louisville, Kentucky, but the husband (appellee’s servant) had worked for it, and the corporation of which it was a subsidiary, for as much as twelve years, and according to the proof he had given entire satisfaction. He received as compensation for his services under his parol contract of. employment a weekly wage payable at the end of each week, but there was nothing in the contract according to the undisputed proof limiting the days upon which Hinkle should work for his employer, nor anything forbidding him working on Sunday.

August 10 of the referred to year was Sunday, and a short time before that Hinkle was instructed by *104 appellee’s superintendent to prepare and be ready with his truck and the material that was to be spread on the highway, to commence the work on Monday morning, August 11. In order to be at that place (which, as we have seen, is 100 miles distant from Winchester) he started with his truck on Sunday, the 10th of that month, and when he had traveled possibly one-half the distance his truck for some reason ran off the highway, into a ditch and turned over, resulting'in his death. Appellant, as his widow and sole dependent, made application to the Compensation Board for an allowance under its terms, but appellee contested her right thereto on the ground that the accident resulting in the death of Hinkle did not “arise out of and in the course of his employment.” Proof was taken, and stipulations were filed, and the cause was submitted to a referee of the Board who sustained the defense interposed by the employer and dismissed the application. A Full Board hearing was later had pursuant to the statute and it agreed with the referee and entered an order accordingly. The applicant then filed this action in the Clark circuit court for a review accompanying it with the record made before the Board, including the evidence heard and stipulations entered into, when the cause was submitted to the court, followed by its conclusion that the orders of the referee and of the Full Board were each correct, and the petition was dismissed from which appellant prosecutes this appeal.

It was stipulated “that the character of decedent’s work in which he was engaged when he met his death was in the furtherance of the eüiployer’s business, and the work was such that had the accident occurred on Monday it would have been conceded that it arose out of and in ■ the course of his employment. . It is agreed that the trip taken on Sunday was not the personal affair of Hinkle, but was done in furtherance of the Allen-Codell Cotapany’s business.” It was further stipulated that decedent was traveling on his way from the warehouse of appellee in "Winchester to the railroad siding about 100- miles distant, “and the siding on which the asphalt was located was the place where he had been instructed to load that particular truck.”

Appellant took the depositions of James B. Allen, superintendent of appellee, whose testimony confirmed the facts hereinbefore stated and confirmed 'the stipulation referred to. He also testified that decedent when. *105 not engaged in truck driving worked in the shop repairing trucks and that on the Saturday before he was killed the following Sunday, he .was engaged in such repair work. He was asked and answered:

“Q. If there was repair work to be done, or a truck to be serviced to go« out the next morning, he would work nights, wouldn’t he? A. Yes sir.
“Q. If there was work to be done on a truck that was in some way disabled, on the weekend, he would do it, or do some work on Sunday, wouldn’t he? A. Yes sir.
“Q. And had done that down through the years frequently? A. Yes sir, he had done that frequently.
“Q. As superintendent of this Company, you did know about it and desire for that truck to be in Paints-ville on Monday morning loaded with oil and ready to go to work, didn’t you? A. Yes sir.”
He then stated that he was - the one who directed Hinkle “to report on Monday morning at Paintsville.” He was then asked and answered:
“Q. In taking that truck, is it true and known to you that he left here on Sunday with the truck and went over to get some oil (asphalt), I believe, is that true? A. Yes that is true.
“Q. And you told him to go to Yan Lear or to this railroad siding to get the asphalt, to go over there and get the truck loaded and report to Paintsville on Monday morning? A. Yes sir. # # * Beginning Monday morning I told him to have the distributor there on Monday morning.
“Q. There was no dissatisfaction or objection on your part to his leaving here on Sunday, was there, and that would have been quite consistent with the way he had carried out his orders in the past, wouldn’t it? A. Yes sir.
“Q. And by reason of the fact that he was one of your regular truck drivers and had frequently been given charge of the truck to go away over the week ends on other times on jobs, you left it up to his best judgment as to when he left here and when he picked up the asphalt, in order to arrive at Paintsville on Monday morning? A. Yes, we told him we wanted it Monday morning.
*106 “Q. I mean, from his reliability, which had been shown over a number of years, you left it to his judgment as to what time he left here and what time he picked up the asphalt, just so he got it there on Monday morning? A. Yes sir.
“Q. "When he concluded to leave here Sunday morning, there was nothing contrary to usual practice in his doing that, was there? A. No sir.
“Q. There was no specification that he work six days or didn’t work Sundays, was there? A. No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 20, 298 Ky. 102, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinkle-v-allen-codell-co-kyctapphigh-1944.