Mahaffey v. Mill Creek Lumber Co.

147 So. 834, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1781
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1933
DocketNo. 4401.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 147 So. 834 (Mahaffey v. Mill Creek Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahaffey v. Mill Creek Lumber Co., 147 So. 834, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1781 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The petition of plaintiff avers that on or about May 14, 1929, while in the employ of defendant, the Mill Creek Lumber Company, a copartnership composed of S. M. Tomme, Mrs. S. M. Tomme, Chas. E. Tomme, and Carroll D. Tomme, he was injured by falling off a motortruck used in hauling logs in connection with his work, and by the right rear wheel of said truck passing over and crushing the bone of the thigh of his right leg. He further alleges that, as a result of said injuries, the usefulness of his leg is so seriously impaired as to amount to permanent loss of same; that since said injuries he has not been able to do any work of a reasonable character, and that this disability will continue the remainder of his life; that he sustained said injuries in the performance of services arising out of and incidental to his employment with defendants, who were the owners of and operated a sawmill engaged in manufacturing lumber from logs, and selling same.

1-Ie sues the mill company and its members in solido for compensation of $10.72 per week for 400 weeks, less payments thereof made to August 13, 1930.

Defendants filed exceptions of misjoinder, prematurity, and of no cause or right of action. No action was taken on either exception, according to the record. None of them is urged in this court. The answer of defendants denied, categorically, all the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, except those relating to defendant’s partnership status, the persons composing it, and the business it is engaged in, which are all admitted. It is also admitted that plaintiff was injured, and that defendant provided him with medical, surgical, and hospital attention and service, and that he has drawn his wages since said time. In the alternative, defendants aver that, in event it should be found and held that plaintiff was injured while in the discharge of his duties, he is now recovered to such extent that he is able to perform some labor and is not permanently disabled.

There was judgment in the lower court rejecting plaintiff’s demands, and .he appealed.

Defendant’s counsel, in brief, says that the question to be decided is: Did the relationship of employer and employee exist between plaintiff and defendant on the day and at the time of the accident, and was the plain *835 tiff working for defendant in the discharge of his duty at time of the injury complained ■of? We think there is another question presented, which has to be passed on in deciding the case, and that is this: Did the injury to plaintiff “arise out of and incidental to his employment in the course of his employer’s business,” within the meaning of Act No. 20 of 1914, and the jurisprudence of this state interpreting that statute?

Defendant carried insurance in the Southern Casualty Company to protect it against loss and damage to injured employees. Immediately after plaintiff was injured, Mr. Ohas. E. Tomme, a member of defendant partnership, made up and transmitted to the insurance company the usual and customary report covering plaintiff’s injury, advising that he was an employee of the insured and entitled to compensation. On the faith of the verity of this report, compensation was paid plaintiff until August 13, 1930, when it was discontinued because of the insurance company being placed in the hands of a receiver. This suit was then filed. Plaintiff testified, and it is not contradicted by any evidence, that he consulted Carroll Tomme, another member of defendant firm, as to the course he should pursue after payment of .compensation ceased, and that Tomme advised him to enter suit against the surety company. He had been working, according to his testimony and understanding, for defendant -for three or four months, and lived one-fourth of a mile from the mill. When injured he was in the woods on his way to, but one hundred yards from, the place where his regular labor was daily performed, and one and one-half miles from his home. Handling hooking tongs was his principal duty. He testified that defendant required its truck drivers to pick up the workmen each morning and convey them to the scene of 'their labors, and that the morning he was injured one Doyle Giddens, driving a truck he thought belonged to defendant, in keeping with the rule and custom, did pick up him and a colaborer by the name of Nettles-, tractor operator, and was conveying them to the place where they had worked the day before loading logs, and, as a heavy rain had fallen the night before, they had gotten out of the truck several times on the way to do what was necessary to drain the road of rainwater thereon, this being done to enable the trucks to haul logs over it; that, as the truck started off, after making the last stop for said purpose, he fell out of it to the ground and was run -over and injured, as above described. This was the first time plaintiff had assisted in draining the road.

There was no direct evidence offered by plaintiff besides his own.

• Doyle Giddens, on behalf of defendants, testified that he was hauling logs for the defendant company; that he passed plaintiff’s home about 7 o’clock the morning of the accident, and was hailed by him; that plaintiff asked him where he was going, and he replied “to work the road,” whereupon plaintiff requested that he be allowed to go along, which was acceded to, and he “pitched in and helped us some himself voluntarily” ; that it was the truck drivers’ obligation to keep the roads in condition for hauling logs to the mill. He also testified that he was not employed by the mill company, contradicting earlier evidence given by him, but by Charlie Tomme and Oscar Boyett, the company’s bookkeeper; that the company had nothing to do with the truck he was driving; that on the day of the accident to plaintiff none of its employees was working in the woods, on account of heavy rain the night before; that, for his services as operator of the truck, which he said was owned by Charlie Tomme and Oscar Boyett, he was paid “by the fourth” of what he hauled, which amounted to from three to four dollars per day. He admits that plaintiff had hooked the tongs to logs loaded on this particular truck for two or three months and had thus worked the day before he was injured, that he had regularly ridden on this truck to his work in the woods, and that it was the custom for all the trucks to haul the laborers to the woods to work. However, he says this was not required by the company of Mr. Tomme, but was known to them. He also states that Charlie Tomme and Oscar Boyett would pay him for his services in cash at the company’s commissary, that Bud Nettles operated the tractor, used to load his truck with logs, and that plaintiff and Nettles composed the crew that loaded the logs on the truck, and, when asked why they happened to be on his truck, going towards the place where the loading had been done the day before, at time plaintiff was injured, replied, Just to be with me.” The following testimony given by this witness is significant:

“Q. Who were the crew that run the tractor? A. Bud Nettles and Mahaffey.
“Q. Then it happened by accident that on the day that Mahaffey got hurt that you as usual left your home at the usual hour, went out on the usual road hauling the loader crew to where you usually haul? A. Right.
“Q. Yet you want this Court to believe that they were not going out to work? A. They were not, they were laid off.
“Q. The Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 834, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahaffey-v-mill-creek-lumber-co-lactapp-1933.