Lind v. Eddy

6 N.W.2d 427, 232 Iowa 1328
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1942
DocketNo. 46129.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 6 N.W.2d 427 (Lind v. Eddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lind v. Eddy, 6 N.W.2d 427, 232 Iowa 1328 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

Appellants Eddy and Todd were minors and were represented throughout the trial by T. J. Mahoney, guardian ad litem.

During the summer of 1941, highway 169 was paved from Ogden south for a distance of six miles. The pavement was completed on July 22d and opened to the public generally on August 25th. The accident occurred about noon on August 14,-1941, at which time the highway was being used by the public “quite a bit” though “road closed” signs were at the north and south ends of the new pavement. Appellee was an employee of the Green Construction Company, which had the grading and finishing contract, and at the time of the accident was shoveling dirt on the east side of the pavement where he was struck by a northbound truck driven by defendant Todd at a speed of forty to sixty miles per hour.

. Hallett Construction Company operates a gravel pit located about two miles west of Boone and at the time of the accident had sold gravel to the paving - contractors, Booth and Olson, at a price that included delivery at Perry, which is southwest of Boone. Appellant Eddy was engaged in a general trucking business and for some time prior to the accident owned and operated two trucks. One of the trucks was driven by his father until a day and a half prior to the accident, when Eddy employed Todd *1330 as a driver. About a week before the accident, Eddy started hauling gravel for the Hallett Construction Company from its gravel pit to Perry. He was paid by the ton. He paid all operating expenses of both trucks. The amount of gravel per load, the number of loads, and hours worked per day, the speed and manner of driving the truck, the route to Perry, the manner of unloading the truck were left to the determination of Eddy. The company was interested only in having the gravel delivered at a designated place at Perry. Eddy was not subject to the orders of the construction company as to how he should deliver the gravel to its representative at Perry, and was clearly an independent contractor. Burns v. Eno, 213 Iowa 881, 240 N. W. 209; In re Estate of Amond, 203 Iowa 306, 210 N. W. 923; Norton v. Day Coal Co., 192 Iowa 160, 180 N. W. 905; Ash v. Century Lbr. Co., 153 Iowa 523, 133 N. W. 888, 38 L. R. A., N. S., 973.

• Though appellee alleged in his petition that Eddy was an employee of the construction company and sought to have him respond in damages on the sole ground that he consented to the use of his truck by Todd, we have determined the true relationship between Eddy and the construction company because the question of independent contractor is referred to in the instructions and repeatedly considered in arguments of counsel.

I. We will first refer to the appeal of Hallett Construction Company. Appellant’s motion for directed verdict on the ground that Todd was not its employee should have been sustained, because in fact Todd was the employee of the independent contractor, Eddy.

Appellee claims the following facts show Todd was an employee of the construction company, or at least warranted the submission of the question to the jury:

„ After Eddy had been hauling gravel a few days he asked the company if he could put his other truck on the job. An employee told him to “bring it down and put her to work.” His father hired Todd to drive the second truck. “My father hired him [Todd] for me. * * * My father made arrangements with Todd to drive my truck for me.. * * * I was the one that was to pay him for his work. * * * I had my dad employed to drive the other truck prior to that. * * * I knew Wesley was *1331 driving my truck. # * * I told these gentlemen [construction company] that my father had hired Todd to operate this truck.”

Appellee relies especially on the following testimony of Todd to establish his contention that he was an employee of the construction company:

Direct examination.

“When I went on the job that morning I drove this truck back under the dump there where the gravel was let into the truck.

“When I drove away from the loading chute there I went up to the scale house and gassed up and then they told me where to go. The fellows in the scale house told me where I was to go. .He said I was supposed to take it to Perry. Q. Did he tell.you how to get to Perry? * * * A. Well, they just told me to leave the plant and go to Ogden, and he just said go to Perry, and I had been down that way so I asked him if I was supposed to go out on the highway and he said yes, and I says, ‘ How, am I supposed to do that?’ and he says, ‘There will be two oil stations, one on the northeast corner and one on the southwest corner, and just turn there and go south.’ * * *

“I knew the road that he indicated from the description of the oil station I was to turn south on. I had been up there. I later found out it was 169, but at that time I wasn’t sure if it was 169 or not. That was the road in hauling this gravel from the plant here in Boone County to the job in Perry over which I traveled for the day and a half there. * * *

1 ‘ They told me I was supposed to take it to Perry and drive into Perry on the highway that would be going west and drive right down the main street of the town and a fellow there would meet me in a ’36 or ’37 grey Y-8 coupe and instruct me where to dump the gravel. * * *

“I went down, and when I went down there then I went back a block north looking for this fellow. I never found him. I waited until Mr. Eddy came along and I told him what was the matter, and he said come with him. He knew where I was supposed to go, so I followed him out and apparently from what has been said he went out to Booth and Olson’s and I dumped the gravel there. That was my first load. * * *

*1332 ‘ ‘ Q. Did you get straightened out on your second load where you were to deliver the gravel according to the instructions you received from somebody down at the plant ? A. These other four fellows [other truckers] told me where to go so I fell in line with them. They knew where to go. They had unloaded one load. « # #

“I just went into the scale house and they weighed me out again and we was all hauling* the same kind of gravel and they was the only two and they said they had already been hired for that road and they went up and they had loaded out and they was hauling the same place I was so I followed them on down and unloaded too. * * *

“I don’t know who it was at the plant who told me to look for the fellow in the Ford V-8 grey coupe.”

Cross-examination.

“When I went down there to Hailett’s for my first load and loaded up, they just told me to load first and I went and loaded. I was told by Mr. Eddy to go down there that morning so I went in the scale house and askedo them'what I was supposed to do. They said ‘Drive on the scales and we will weigh your truck out right now. ’ When Mr. Eddy sent me down there, he didn’t tell me where this gravel was to be taken to, so when I got down to Hailett’s I didn’t know where this gravel was to be taken so I asked the fellows in the scale house where it was to be taken before I left. They told me it was to be taken to Perry.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.W.2d 427, 232 Iowa 1328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lind-v-eddy-iowa-1942.