Louvring v. Excel Logging Co.

573 P.2d 266, 280 Or. 463, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 725
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1977
Docket75-6084, SC 25182
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 573 P.2d 266 (Louvring v. Excel Logging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louvring v. Excel Logging Co., 573 P.2d 266, 280 Or. 463, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 725 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

*465 HOLMAN, J.

Plaintiff brought an action for personal injuries. Defendant denied liability and alleged by supplemental answer that plaintiff was defendant’s employee and therefore was limited to workmen’s compensation benefits. The issue presented by the supplemental answer was tried to the court, which sustained the answer and dismissed plaintiffs complaint. Plaintiff appeals.

Defendant is a logging contractor. Plaintiff hauled logs for defendant. A log being yarded by defendant’s employee at the site where plaintiffs truck was being loaded struck plaintiff, causing the injuries for which damages are being sought.

Plaintiff claims that because he was not a "workman” the trial court erred in finding that he was a "subject workman” under subsections (26) and (28) of ORS 656.005 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. 1 He claims the court further erred by finding that he was not an independent contractor. Plaintiff asserts that the evidence showed the following:

"(1) The Plaintiff, in hauling logs for the Defendant, used his own truck and equipment;
"(2) The Plaintiff, by understanding, had the right to hire assistants to haul Defendant’s logs;
*466 "(3) For eight months out of the twelve preceding plaintiffs injury, the Defendant’s operations were suspended. During the period from November, 1974, to the time of his injury, fully a third of the log loads hauled by Plaintiff were for operators other than the Defendant;
"(4) The Plaintiff was hired on a per load basis, and had the right to work for other operators if not satisfied with Defendant’s price tender for a given 'show’;
"(5) Plaintiff maintained his own accident insurance coverage and Public Utility Commission license at all times he was engaged to haul logs for the Defendant;
"(6) The Defendant controlled the destination of logs hauled by Plaintiff from its logging sites, but Plaintiff determined his own routes without restriction, and regulated the log load weight on his truck;
"(7) Plaintiff paid for all of his own operating expenses related to work done for the Defendant;
"(8) Plaintiffs activities at Defendant’s log loading sites were performed in cooperation with, but not under the supervision of the Defendant’s employees.”

The above state of facts is substantially the same as that which existed in the case of Woody v. Waibel, 276 Or 189 nn. 1 & 2, 554 P2d 492 (1976). We there held that as a matter of law the log hauler was an employee for workmen’s compensation purposes. He was limited to his rights to receive workmen’s compensation and he was not permitted to sue for his injuries the logger for whom he was hauling.

The basis for our determination in Woody was that the evidence showed that the logger had the right to control the hauler’s performance in certain respects but not in others and that the issue of control was evenly enough balanced that the traditional statutory control test was insufficient with which to make a determination. This being so, we held it was permissible to turn to the purposes of the Law in deciding whether the control retained by the logger made the relationship one of master and servant. After considering these purposes, we held there was coverage under the Law for the reasons set forth in the opinion which need not be restated here.

*467 Plaintiff contends that there was additional evidence in this case which dictated a different result. This evidence was, as follows:

"(1) Plaintiffs hours were determined by agreement between himself and other log haulers contracted by Defendant according to a schedule of rotating starting times; and
"(2) Defendant employed one driver for its company-owned truck. That driver was covered by Defendant’s medical insurance plan, and Workmen’s Compensation premiums and income tax were withheld from his pay.”

The evidence indicates that because it was unnecessary that all trucks be at the loading site in the woods at the same time since they could not be loaded simultaneously, the truck drivers decided among themselves the order in which they would appear each morning, usually rotating the times when each would appear on the basis of 15-minute intervals. This mutually convenient agreement among themselves, by which they rotated their turns at being loaded, is not evidence of independence which throws any light upon whether plaintiff was an independent contractor. Nor are we helped by the fact that some other truck driver working in the enterprise is more clearly defendant’s workman, as contemplated by the statute, than is plaintiff.

Plaintiff also claims that his status is affected by the circumstances that he brought the present action after receiving notification that if he did not do so, the State Accident Insurance Fund would prosecute a subrogated action at law against defendant for the amounts it had paid plaintiff in compensation for his injuries, pursuant to his own workmen’s compensation coverage. We hold that this circumstance is irrelevant to whether plaintiff was defendant’s "workman” or was an "independent contractor.”

In addition, plaintiff also claims that the following facts, not extant in Woody, supra, are sufficient, *468 together with the other facts, to establish that plaintiff was an independent contractor and not a workman:

"(1) Plaintiff was at the time of his injury a member of a family partnership comprising himself and his wife, engaged in the independent business of contract log hauling;
"(2) All income derived from and debts incurred by Plaintiffs log hauling operations were deposited in and paid from a joint bank account in the names of Plaintiff and his wife;
"(3) All capital used in the partnership contract hauling operation was owned jointly by Plaintiff and his wife. Moreover, the accident insurance and P.U.C. licenses covering the logging truck operated by Plaintiff were in the joint names of Plaintiff and his wife.”

ORS 656.027(7) states:

"All workmen are subject to ORS 656.001 to 656.794 except those nonsubject workmen described in the following subsections:
*
"(7) Sole proprietors, partners and officers of corporations.
* * * Ht 99

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Carlile v. Greeninger
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
573 P.2d 266, 280 Or. 463, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louvring-v-excel-logging-co-or-1977.