Knight v. Hawkins

173 S.W.2d 163, 26 Tenn. App. 448, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 30, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 163 (Knight v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight v. Hawkins, 173 S.W.2d 163, 26 Tenn. App. 448, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 143 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

KETCHUM, J.

This is an action instituted by Mrs. Hawkins against the plaintiffs in error A. J. Knight and the National Life & Accident Insurance Company to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of her husband D. M. (Jack) Hawkins in an automobile accident. The accident happened at about G p. m. on the 28th day of February, 1940, at a point on State Highway No. 20 just north of the town of Friendship, in Crockett County. *451 The defendant was driving alone in his antomobile on his way home from Jackson to Dyershnrg. Just after he passed through the town of Friendship he ran off the concrete road and struck the said Hawkins who was walking in the same direction on the left shoulder of the road. There were no eyewitnesses to the accident hut the circumstantial evidence indicates that the car ran diagonally across the road and struck Hawkins as he was walking-in the same direction on the left shoulder of the road. As a result of the impact he received injuries which resulted in his death approximately an hour later. Knight himself had no recollection of what caused him to lose control of the car and there is evidence that he stated after the accident that he had fallen asleep and lost control of the car, but on the trial he testified that without any warning of drowsiness or illness he had lapsed into unconsciousness, and that he regained consciousness after the car had run off the road into a field across the ditch. Hawkins was unconscious when the first witness arrived after the accident and never regained consciousness after that.

The case was tried before a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment against the defendants for $8,000. Both defendants have appealed in error to this court.

By its first and fourth assignments of error the Insurance Company contends that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict against it, and that the court erred in overruling its motion for a directed verdict at the close of all the proof.

There is ample evidence to sustain the verdict as to the defendant Knight. But the Insurance Company contends that the doctrine of respondeat superior can have no application because there is no evidence to sus *452 tain the allegation that Knight was its employee, or that it had any control over him, or had any right to direct or control his movements in the operation of his car at the time the accident occurred. ■

Knight was the District Manager of the defendant Insurance Company, having his headquarters in Jackson. His territory embraced all of West Tennessee outside of Shelby County, with certain counties in Northern Mississippi and Western Kentucky. He had a large number of industrial agents of the company working* under him at Jackson and in all the principal towns throughout his territory. He was the ‘ ‘ recruiting officer ’ ’ for new agents for the company in his territory and it was his duty to train the agents and instruct them as to their duties, give them examinations from time to time, and to perform other duties incident to his task of producing, building up and promoting the business of the company in his district. He was paid a base salary plus commissions on new business produced in his district. He also wrote some ordinary life insurance business for which he was paid the usual agents’ commissions.

He had started to work for the company as an industrial agent many years before and had been promoted from time to time, and had been a District Agent for eight years. He had no written contract with the company, but he was assigned a territory, and his compensation was agreed upon either orally or in correspondence with officers of the company. His duties as District Agent were set forth in a book of instructions which was furnished to all agents, and in a manual for the guidance of District Agents and Superintendents which was furnished to him.

*453 He was required to devote his entire time to the work of the company. One of the duties required of him was to give periodical examinations or instructions to the industrial agents of the company in his district. For these examinations the agents throughout his district would he called to meet him either at Jackson, or at some other town in the district on specified dates. He had called the agents of his district to meet him at Dyers-burg for such examination on the 29th of February, 1940. On the evening of the 28th he left Jackson at about 5 o’clock to go to Dyersburg for the meeting to be held there on the following day; and it was while he was on this trip that the accident occurred.

It was optional with him whether he held these agents ’ meetings at Jackson or at other places in his district. When they were held elsewhere than at Jackson the company paid his hotel and traveling expenses, and when he drove his own car it paid him mileage for the use of his car.

The company reserved the right to terminate the services of any person connected with it at its pleasure, without stated cause.

It paid the Social Security tax to the Federal Government as an employer, and Knight also paid his share of said tax. The company also provided a retirement fund for employees reaching the age of 65, and District Agents were entitled to the benefits of this provision upon attaining that ag’e.

While there is much force in the argument that Knight’s status in relation to' the company was that of an independent contractor whose duty it was only to achieve a certain result, and that the company was not concerned with the means and methods by which he accomplished *454 that result (and there are many cases supporting that view as will be hereinafter pointed out), yet there are many facts which seem to us to lead to the conclusion that the relationship between them was that of master and servant.

The fact that he was paid a salary and that he was required to devote his entire time to the company’s business are indicative of an employer and employee relationship. And the fact that the company reserved the right to discharge him at will is by all the cases recognized as a most important circumstance as indicating that the relationship is that of employer and employee. In Odom v. Sanford & Treadway et al., 156 Tenn. 202, 210, 299 S. W. 1045, 1047, the court adopts the following-statement of the rule on this question from 14 R. O. L., “Independent Contractors,” sec. 9, page 72: “The power of an employer to terminate the employment at any time is incompatible with the full control of the work which is usually enjoyed by an independent contractor, and hence is considered as a strong circumstance tending to show the subserviency of the employee. Indeed, it has been said that no single fact is more conclusive, perhaps, than the unrestricted right of the employer to end the particular service whenever he chooses . . . On the other hand, the fact that the employer cannot terminate the employment strongly tends to show that the contractor is independent. ’ ’

And in Income Life Insurance Co. v. Mitchell, 168 Tenn. 471, 79 S. W. (2d) 572, it is said that the right to discharge, or the absence of such right, is a circumstance of much importance in determining whether the relationship of employer and employee exists, citing Odom v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 163, 26 Tenn. App. 448, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-hawkins-tennctapp-1941.