Homewood Rice Land Syndicate v. Suhs

219 S.W. 333, 142 Ark. 619, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 333 (Homewood Rice Land Syndicate v. Suhs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Homewood Rice Land Syndicate v. Suhs, 219 S.W. 333, 142 Ark. 619, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 84 (Ark. 1920).

Opinion

Wood, J.

The appellee brought this action against the appellant to recover a balance which he alleged was due him on a contract entered into with appellant by the terms of which appellee was to raise about 300 acres of rice on the lands of appellant, being the same number of acres cultivated by the appellant in 1911. Appellant was to pay appellee the sum of $5,000 “for labor to raise and properly irrigate, mature, and harvest” the rice. The appellee was to do all necessary hauling, to do the plowing in the fall and winter for the next year’s crop. In case of too bad weather in the fall and winter, he was to be allowed to plow as late as April 15th. If appellant was going to make a change in the employment or in case the appellee was going to make a change and stop raising rice after the termination of the contract, either party was to give the opposite party a notice of his intention in writing three months previous to the termination of the contract. Appellee was also to make all necessary levees, canals, flumes, and open up all drains and outlets pertaining- to the crop; to keep all fences in good repair; to do the cutting and proper shocking of the rice; to take care of all the farming tools, wagons and machinery, putting same in the tool shed when not in use and to take good care of everything belonging to the party of the first part. There was also a further provision that, all seed rice must be cleaned on fanning mill and the land must be well prepared, well ditched and harrowed. For raising the crops appellant was to pay appellee partly in monthly installments. The appellant during the time of threshing the rice was to furnish the appellee a man to tend to the separator and also to furnish an engineer and a man and team for the water wagon. The appellant was also to furnish seed rice, binding twine, rice sacks, coal and wood, oil and grease, and all necessary tools and machinery.

The appellee alleged that he had complied with all the terms of the contract, and that appellant had paid him the sum of $3,500, leaving a balance due him of $1,500, for which he prayed judgment.

The appellant answered denying that appellee had complied with the terms of his contract in this, that instead of seeding 300 acres of land to rice, as he was bound to do under the contract, he only seeded 260 acres, to appellant’s damage in the sum of $2,250; that the appellee had also failed to harvest 60 acres of the 260 acres, which he seeded, to appellant’s damages in the sum of $3,375, making the total damage to appellant, by reason of appellee’s failure to comply with his contract, in the sum of $5,625. This sum the appellant asked to be allowed as a counter-claim against appellee.

The appellant also alleged that the appellee wrongfully appropriated to his own use 363 bushels of rice which were worth $163.35, which appellant claims as a set-off.

Appellant prayed that it have judgment against the appellee for said sums.

The appellee answered the cross-complaint, admitting that he only harvested about 200 acres of rice, but alleged that of the 300 seeded to rice 100 acres were lost on account of the failure of the appellant to supply enough water to irrigate the same. He denied that appellant was damaged in any sum on account of appellee’s failure to comply with the terms of the contract. He also denied that he was indebted to the appellant for 363 bushels of cracked rice.

It will be observed that the execution of the contract was admitted by the appellant but it denied that the appellee had performed the contract on his part. On the contrary, it alleged that the appellee had failed to perform his part of the contract in the particulars set forth in its answer and cross-complaint and prayed for damages on account of such failure.

The first question, therefore, to be determined is whether or not the appellee complied with the contract. A proper solution of this involves a construction of the contract to determine what were the obligations of the appellant. Appellant contends that under the contract the appellee was an independent contractor and bound under the terms of the contract to produce and deliver to appellant about 300 acres of rice for which appellant was to pay him the sum of $5,000. Undoubtedly, if the contract read that “Edward Suhs hereby agrees and makes contract to raise about 300 acres of rice for which party of the first part agrees to pay the party of the second part the sum of $5,000,” the appellant would be correct in its contention, for if these were the terms of the contract they would denote an unqualified undertaking upon the part of the appellee to produce and deliver to the appellant the rice from 300 acres of land according to his own methods and using his own means to accomplish the result without being subject to the control or direction of the appellant in any particular. But, when all the provisions of this contract are construed together, as they must be, the relation of the appellee to the appellant was not that of an independent contractor.

The contract itself does not undertake in words to define or characterize the relation of the parties to each other. Yet, when all of its provisions are considered, we are convinced that it should be construed as creating the relation of employer and employee or master and servant, rather than that of independent contractor employed for no other purpose than to produce through his own resources a crop of rice on appellant’s land.

In J. W. Wheeler & Co. v. Fitzpatrick, 135 Ark. 117-24, this court, in the language of Judge Elliott, defines an independent contractor as follows: “An independent contractor may be defined as one who, in the course of an independent occupation, prosecutes and directs the work himself, using his own methods to accomplish it, and represents the will of the company only as to the result of his work.” From Words and Phrases as follows: “An independent contractor is one who, exercising an independent employment, contracts to do a piece of work according to his own methods and without being subject to the control of his' employer, except as to the result of the work.”

Now, applying the above definitions to the contract under review, it is manifest that the relation of the appellee to the appellant was not that of an independent contractor.

If the parties had intended that appellee’s duty under the contract were at an end when he had cultivated, harvested and delivered the rice raised on 300 acres of appellant’s land, the contract would have doubtless been couched in language similar to that above set forth and would have ended there. But, instead of this, the parties proceeded to specify things that are to be done by the appellee and appellant, which are wholly incongruous with the theory that the appellee was to produce and deliver to the appellant the rice grown on the 300 acres of land as a condition precedent to his receiving any consideration for his services. It will be observed that the contract does not stop with merely obligating the appellee to ‘ ‘ raise about 300 acres of rice, ’ ’ but it proceeds to specify the methods to be used, and enumerates the things which the appellee is required to do in order to produce such results, and also specifies certain obligations on the part of the appellant which must be done to contribute to such result, which necessarily imports that the appellee could not use his own means and methods but that he must adopt and use those furnished and specified by the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 333, 142 Ark. 619, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homewood-rice-land-syndicate-v-suhs-ark-1920.