Index Drilling Co., Inc. v. Williams

137 So. 2d 525, 242 Miss. 775, 8 A.L.R. 3d 323, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 593
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1962
Docket42142
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 137 So. 2d 525 (Index Drilling Co., Inc. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Index Drilling Co., Inc. v. Williams, 137 So. 2d 525, 242 Miss. 775, 8 A.L.R. 3d 323, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 593 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

*780 Ethridge, J.

Appellee, Charles Oree Williams, Jr., filed this suit in the Circuit Court, Second District of Jones County, Mississippi, against appellant, Index Drilling Co., Inc., for personal injuries. He recovered a verdict and judgment for $63,500. The principal questions involved are (1) interpretation of the third-party tort-feasor provisions of the Mississippi Workmen’s Compensation Act, where the employee, after receiving compensation benefits, brings a third-party action against a corporation wholly owned by those owning his employer-corporation; (2) whether the lent-servant doctrine applies; and (3) the validity of the verdict, as to whether it was a quotient verdict, and grossly excessive.

I.

The jury was warranted in finding for the plaintiff on the issue of liability. Williams was 18 years old on September 8, 1956, the date of the accident. At the time of trial he was 23 and unmarried. He was employed *781 by Production Service, Inc. (called Production). Production was one of five corporations wholly owned by C. P. and L. H. Martin. Until April 1956, they had operated as a co-partnership engaged in servicing, trucking and drilling operations in oil fields. At that time the partners organized five separate corporations, including Production, and transferred their interests to these five corporations: Production Service, Inc., Dapsco, Inc., Index Drilling Co., Inc., the defendant (called Index), Marmiss Supply Co., Inc., and C. P. Martin, Inc. The partners were the sole officers, directors and stockholders. Plaintiff was employed by Production. He was on its payroll and thus was paid by it.

On the day of the accident, Williams had worked for Production on a home in the City of Laurel until about 3 p.m., when he went to the office of Dapsco, Inc., at the air base in Laurel, where the main offices and field offices of the five corporations are located. Kervin Hall, of the Dapsco office, instructed him to help unload a truck and put some drill pipes and pipe racks on another one. Williams went to the truck, which had a sign on its door, “Index Drilling Co., Inc.” The truck driver was Thaddeus Anderson, an employee of Index. The trailer contained drill pipes about 30 feet in length, and large pipe racks made in a triangular shape and weighing about 1,000 pounds each. James Knight, an employee of Production, was present on the float or trailer which was being unloaded. Harry (Rudolph) Walters said he was employed by Dapsco, Inc., as field superintendent for the entire operation. The pipe racks were to be picked up with a crane or winch mounted upon the truck driven by Anderson, an employee of Index.

According to plaintiff’s testimony, Knight hooked the chain around two racks, and the hoist on Anderson’s truck, under his control, lifted them and set them on a concrete floor. One rack was sitting on its base and the *782 other was leaning against it. Anderson told Williams to unhook the hoist line from the racks, and Williams did that. Anderson then started the crane and winch line, picking it up. This “jarred against that rack and knocked it over.” The pipe rack fell on plaintiff’s foot, resulting’ in the injuries for which he sought damages.

Williams said that he never worked for or agreed to work for Index. Index never paid him for any work. When he returned to the air base, he reported to, Hall, employed by Dapsco, Inc., because that was the custom. When he reached the truck, Harry Walters, head foreman for Production, was present along with Knight and Anderson. Walters told him to stay on the ground, and to unhook the line from the racks. Anderson was on the truck operating the crane. Anderson picked up two racks together, laid them down once, then picked them up, and set them down again. Anderson then told him to go ahead and unhook the line from the racks. Plaintiff said he did what Hall instructed him to do. When Index’s truck driver, Anderson, told him to unhook the line, he did. When the crane picked the racks off the float, Walters left going toward the office, and was not present when plaintiff was hurt.

James Knight said he was working under Walters’ direction, but that Anderson told him to hook the racks together, and instructed Williams to unhook the lines, which Williams did. Anderson was looking through the back window of the truck and could see what was going on. After the driver told plaintiff to unhook the line, but before he could move out of the way, the rack fell on his foot. Knight denied he had given Anderson the signal to move on.

On the other hand, Anderson said that after he had set down the racks, Williams, who was “swamping” for him, unhooked the line and gave him the signal to pull away. He admitted that Walters was not present when plaintiff unhooked the racks; that when he did *783 this, it was either on his own or Anderson’s direction. He was looking ont the back window of the trnck. He knew that, when he lowered two racks at once, one of them wonld be at an angle. He said that Williams was in the right place to nnhook the lines, but denied telling him to unhook them.

Walters was on a truck about 100 feet away checking drill collars on pipes, when he looked over and saw the racks in their positions, which he knew “were dangerous and would fall”, so he called to Williams to move out of the way, but about that time they fell. He did not know whether Anderson gave plaintiff orders to unhook the line or plaintiff told Anderson to move the truck.

From this summary of the evidence, the following were manifestly questions for the jury: Whether the employee of Index, its truck driver, Anderson, negligently and carelessly started the crane in operation before plaintiff could get out of the way, and as a proximate result of such negligence, Anderson caused the rack to fall on plaintiff’s foot; whether it was negligent to unload two of the racks at one time, and, if so, whether plaintiff’s injuries were a proximate result of such negligence; and finally, the issue of Williams asserted contributory negligence.

II.

After Williams was injured, he received under the Workmen’s Compensation Act temporary total disability benefits for 39 weeks, an award of 65-4/7 weeks for permanent partial disability, for 50 per cent loss of use of the left foot, and hospital and medical expenses. In August 1959, he filed with the Workmen’s Compensation Commission, under Sec. 9(i) of the Act, a petition for authority to make a compromise lump sum settlement with his employer, designated as Martin’s Connection Works and Welding Shop, being one and the same as Dapsco, Inc. The petition averred that a “steel plate” *784 had fallen on his left foot, which resulted in “amputation of the big toe and the second toe of that foot, and that he received other personal injuries;” that claimant had reached maximum recovery, and a settlement had been agreed upon, by which, in addition to benefits already paid, claimant would receive $2,300 plus $355.10 medical expenses; and that claimant desired to settle and compromise all of his claims under the act.

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Bluebook (online)
137 So. 2d 525, 242 Miss. 775, 8 A.L.R. 3d 323, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/index-drilling-co-inc-v-williams-miss-1962.