Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Kinsey

16 S.E.2d 179, 65 Ga. App. 433, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 334
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 8, 1941
Docket28857.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 16 S.E.2d 179 (Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Kinsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Kinsey, 16 S.E.2d 179, 65 Ga. App. 433, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 334 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

J. R. Kinsey filed with the Industrial Board his claim for workmen’s compensation against R. H. Ragan Plumbing & Heating Company and National Fruit Products Company, as employers, and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, as insurance-carrier. The full board affirmed the finding of facts and award by the single director in favor of the claimant against the National' Fruit Products Company and the insurance carrier. The superior-court affirmed the award of the full board, and the exception here is to that judgment, the plaintiffs in error contending that the evidence demanded a finding that the claimant was, at the time of his-injury, in the exclusive employ of the plumbing company, an independent contractor, and also contending that even if the National Fruit Products Company was liable the claimant should have been required to exhaust his rights against the plumbing company before proceeding against the former.

From a careful examination of the voluminous evidence we are-of the opinion that the finding of facts and the award were fully authorized. It appears that National Fruit Products Company arranged with a construction company of Philadelphia to erect for it in Atlanta a certain building or plant, before the completion of' which it was necessary that certain machinery, piping, and various connections be installed. This work was so highly specialized and intricate that it could not be done by an ordinary skilled steam *434 fitter, and the company engineer, E. R. Lindstrom, and his assistant, C. W. Gantt, were placed in charge of such matters. In placing the machinery in the building various pipes had to be run and necessary connections made between the plant machinery. Lind^strom, acting for the company, had on several occasions used the services of R. H. Ragan Plumbing & Heating Company in other work. In connection with the running of pipes, making connections, etc. in the new building Lindstrom sought out Ragan, and they entered into an informal agreement whereby Ragan, operating .as R. H. Ragan Plumbing & Heating Company, was to supply the •company with competent labor for running the pipes, making conmections, etc. The bulk of the material to be used in connection -with such work had already been arranged for by the company, 'but it was explained to Ragan that from time to time some material not otherwise provided for was to be furnished by him. It does not appear that there was any express agreement as to what Ragan -was to receive for his services, but it seems to have been taken for granted, from previous experiences between the parties, that at the • completion of whatever was to be done by Ragan he would be paid ■ or reimbursed for the actual cost of the labor and materials sus•tained by him, plus a reasonable amount for overhead and profit. 'Lindstrom, being desirous of having the work done by skillful •steamfitters, free from any labor disputes or trouble of any kind, 'being unacquainted with the labor situation in Atlanta, and having full confidence in the ability and character of Ragan and his "knowledge of and capacity for selection of men who might reasonably be expected to proceed with the work and bring it to a conclusion in a manner satisfactory to the company, relied upon him to furnish the requisite number of suitable and competent steamfitters. No stipulation was made as to wages to be paid, but it ■appears from the evidence that union prices had already been established for such work. The exact processes of the work not being ■accurately or definitely determinable in advance, and no steamfitter "being able to execute it unaided by directions of the engineer or his .■assistant, no written plans or specifications were submitted to Ragan, but he was taken over the entire plant and by Lindstrom was shown the nature of the work to be performed and was told •that the company’s plans would probably be changed from time to -.time and he would be made acquainted at intervals with the va *435 rious details of the work. He was advised that Lindstrom was to have supervision and control of the work, and he did assume such direction when the work was begun. Eagan would daily go to the plant and spend a short while there, and Lindstrom would explain to him the forthcoming processes of installation, the work to be done, and where to be performed. When Eagan was not present during the progress of the work Lindstrom would instruct the employees directly where to work and what to do, and would sometimes transfer an employee from one special job or function to. another. It appears that from the unusual nature of the installation, piping, connections, etc., the completion of the work was undeterminable, and that whatever Eagan had been engaged to do, or-any employee sent by him engaged to do, the termination of the-services was to be at the will of the company.

Among the steamfitters sent to the job by Eagan was J. E. Kinsey, the claimant. At the time Eagan negotiated with Lindstrom Kinsey was employed by Eagan as a steamfitter in an ice cream-plant being erected by other parties in Atlanta. While in the performance of his duties on September 28, 1939, at the plant of the-National Fruit Products Company he sustained a serious accidental injury which immediately resulted in total disability for which his claim was filed. He testified in part that Lindstrom or Gantt gave him orders what to do, and that when he was sent to the job Eagan told him that Lindstrom or Gantt would give him instructions what to do, but that Eagan would probably tell the ones sent there something to do, and would say, “If you want anything to do, ask Mr. Lindstrom or Mr. Gantt either one, and they will tell you what to-do and how to do it and all about it;” that one or the other would' instruct him in the work he was doing, and that they would require him to leave some work that Eagan had put him on and do some other job; that at one time he was required to change a waterline that he had already started along some tanks, made to take it down and put it up in a different way; that, as he recalls, Mr. Lindstrom did that; that when he needed more material or a different material he would go to Mr. Lindstrom and he would order it, and the witness went to him because Eagan had told him to seeLindstrom in such cases; that he was never told how much work was to be done at the plant; that Eagan.gave him no such information when he was sent to the plant; that the only thing Eagan-. *436 told him as to what he was to do at the plant was that Eagan said he would come out there practically every morning, and that he •would go to Lindstrom who would explain to Eagan what he wanted •done, and then Eagan would tell the employees he had sent there, ■saying “If you give out of this, if you give out of what you are doing, go to Mr. Lindstrom or Mr. Gantt and they will tell you ■what tó do;” that Eagan told him that if Lindstrom or Gantt ■wanted him to change any of the work or do it differently or leave it and go to something else, to follow their instructions; that he would have to follow their instructions because a vinegar plant was new to him and neither he nor Eagan knew exactly “how it went;” that he did not have any plans or any diagram or written orders •of the work that was to be done; that the first morning he went •out to the plant Mr. Gantt showed him what to do, and Eagan in •the meantime told him, "If Mr. Lindstrom or Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E.2d 179, 65 Ga. App. 433, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-mutual-insurance-co-v-kinsey-gactapp-1941.