Ignatowitch v. McLaughlin

262 N.W. 352, 66 N.D. 132, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 178
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1935
DocketFile No. 6310.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 262 N.W. 352 (Ignatowitch v. McLaughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ignatowitch v. McLaughlin, 262 N.W. 352, 66 N.D. 132, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 178 (N.D. 1935).

Opinions

Burke, Ch. J.

This is an action for personal injury.

At the. close of plaintiff’s case the defendants each moved for a directed verdict, which was overruled. At the close of the case the motion was renewed and overruled and a verdict was returned for the plaintiff against all the defendants. Thereafter a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or for a new trial, was overruled and from the order overruling such motion and from the judgment the defendants duly appeal.

Appellant claims that the court erred in overruling defendants’ motion for judgment, in favor of the Montana-Dakota Power Company and the Montana-Dakota Utilities Company, made at the close of plaintiff’s case, renewed at the close of the entire case and in overruling the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the ground and for the reason that the plaintiff wholly failed to establish, by competent evidence, that the defendant McLaughlin, at the time of the accident set forth in the complaint, was acting as agent, servant or employee of said defendants.

It is the contention of the respondent that, on the evening of the accident, the defendant McLaughlin made a trip to Gladstone, North Dakota for the purpose of renting an apartment from one John Loh and that he was engaged in the course of his employment and acting as the agent of the other defendants at the. time of the accident.

This contention is based on the evidence that the defendant McLaughlin had a desk in the office of the Montana-Dakota Power Company at Dickinson; that he usually drove his car in the morning and used it without objection in the city of Dickinson when seeing customers; that on the evening of the accident he made a trip to Gladstone to see one John Loh about renting an apartment in Dickinson and that while there he asked Mr. Loh if he was going to furnish a range with the *135 apartment; that he had been to see Mr. Loh on the Sunday previous and a range was also mentioned at that time and that he came bach again' after the accident and again mentioned the range. It is clear, however, from the testimony that Mr. McLaughlin’s territory was confined to the city of Dickinson; that he furnished his own automobile, his own gas and oil and used it at times on trips to customers in the city; that he was paid a commission,-based upon sales in the city of Dickinson; that the only instructions he had from the sales department were furnished in the price list, which he was required to observe in making sales. His time was his own. He could come and go as he pleased without restriction, except that he must observe the price lists in making sales. The manager in the office at Dickinson knew he had an automobile and was using it in the city of Dickinson without objection, but there is no evidence that the other defendants knew that the defendant McLaughlin was making the trip to Gladstone.

On the other hand, the evidence proves that the defendant McLaughlin, on the 20th of July, made the trip to Gladstone, not for the other defendants, but for himself, to rent an apartment in the city of Dickinson. McLaughlin so testified and the conversation he had with the Lohs on that occasion, as testified to by Mrs. Loh,. shows that this trip was made to rent an apartment in Dickinson for the use of the defendant McLaughlin. It is true that ho asked Loh if he would furnish a range and that McLaughlin testified that he wouldn’t have considered a coal range; that he wanted to use gas, but he did not want this range for the other defendants; he wanted it for himself to use in the apartment and when Mr. Loh would not furnish the range the defendant McLaughlin furnished one himself for his use in the apartment and not for the use of the other defendants.

It is clear from this evidence that this trip to Gladstone was made by the defendant McLaughlin for his own purpose and that under his contract with the other defendants his activities in behalf of the other defendants were limited to the city of Dickinson. In going to Gladstone he was not acting in the course of his employment with the defendants, but was acting for himself.

A case very much in point is the case of State ex rel. J. A. Sexauer Mfg. Co. v. Grimm, 217 Wis. 422, 259 N. W. 262. In that case one *136 France, a salesman, was working under a similar contract and the court said: “Counsel seem agreed that the most potent factor in determining whether one is an independent contractor or an agent is where the control of the details of the work lies. Badger Furniture Co. v. Industrial Commission, 200 Wis. 127, 227 N. W. 288. From the above statement of .facts it appears that the control of the details is in France. The respondent, in opposition to this view, relics on a paragraph of the contract as follows: 'All details covering your work are to be under our direction. You are to make sales only upon prices and terms which we shall fix,’ and urges that it is the right- to control the details, rather than the exercise of the rights as matter of fact, that determines the matter of control, and cites the Badger Furniture Co. Case, supra, in support of its contention. This argument loses its force from the fact that the statement as to right of control is made in immediate connection with the control of prices and terms and should be limited to that, as it clearly appears both from the contract and the course of conduct that it was not intended to cover the details of France’s traveling either as to how or where he should travel. The facts of this case make a clearer case of an independent contractor than those in the case of Kassela v. Hoseth, 217 Wis. 115, 258 N. W. 340. Under that case and the authorities cited in the opinion therein we hold that France was not an agent of the relator in respect to the operation of his automobile, but an independent contractor, if he can be considered as a 'contractor’ in any sense in that regard. The term 'independent contractor’ is perhaps a misnomer as so applied. It would be more exact to say that no contractual relations whatever existed between France and the relator as to the operation of the automobile. Whether France was a 'contractor’ or not, his operation of the automobile was entirely 'independent’ of the relator, and, this being so, the relator is not responsible for his conduct-in operating it.”

This language is applicable to the facts in the instant case, for even assuming that McLaughlin went to Gladstone to sell a gas range to John Lola, his operatioaa of the automobile oaa the trip was entirely indcpeaadeiat of the other defendants. There was aao contractual relatioia existing betweeaa them in relatioaa to the operatioaa of the automobile and *137 the other defendants cannot be held liable for an injury occasioned by its use.

In the instant case the defendant McLaughlin rendered service, limited to the city of Dickinson, in the course of an occupation representing the will of his employer as to the result of his work only and not as to the means by which it was to be accomplished and therefore was an independent contractor. Arne v. Western Silo Co. 214 Iowa, 511, 242 N. W. 539; Lumbermen’s Reciprocal Asso. v. Carter (Tex. Civ. App.) 19 S. W. (2d) 346, 352; Preo v. Roed, 99 Cal. App. 372, 278 P. 928; Dillard v. Justus, 222 Mo. App. 362, 3 S. W. (2d) 392; Hutchinson-Moore Lumber Co. v. Pittman, 154 Miss. 1, 122 So. 191; Charles R. McCormick Lumber Co. v. O’Brien, 90 Cal. App. 776, 266 P. 594; Slyter v.

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Bluebook (online)
262 N.W. 352, 66 N.D. 132, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ignatowitch-v-mclaughlin-nd-1935.