McGrath v. Pennsylvania Sugar Co.

127 A. 780, 282 Pa. 265, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 612
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 3, 1924
DocketAppeal, 140
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 127 A. 780 (McGrath v. Pennsylvania Sugar Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrath v. Pennsylvania Sugar Co., 127 A. 780, 282 Pa. 265, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 612 (Pa. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Sadler,

The Pennsylvania Sugar Company, defendant, is engaged in the business of refining sugar for others who forward the raw product to it. A pier is used in connection with the plant where the finished and unfinished material is handled, under the general supervision of defendant’s employees. Stevedores are obtained under contract with firms which make a business of supplying this character of labor, and the actual movements of material to and from the dock are carried on by them. On the day of the accident, which gave rise to the present litigation, Loveland & Co. furnished, under agreement, men for this work, being paid the amount of the wages earned by their employees, plus ten per cent. One of the men sent upon the wharf by Kennedy, the acting foreman for Loveland & Co., was the plaintiff, Mc-Grath. He was told to work upon the top of a large stack of bags filled with sugar, his duty being to put them in a swing which carried them forward, ultimately being loaded by others on a ship anchored in the river. While so engaged, plaintiff contended he was directed by Davey, an assistant foreman of the defendant, to change his position, and continue his labor on the floor, handling the sugar from the side of the stack. Soon after beginning work there, the bags became loosened and fell, causing him serious injury. An action to recover damages was brought, and a verdict for the plaintiff, reduced by the court to $14,000, was rendered. Prom the judgment entered thereon defendant has appealed.

It was insisted below, and the same claim is made here, that the plaintiff must be compensated for his loss, if at all, through the medium of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Section 203, article 11, and 302 (b), article 111, fix the liability of the employer who permits the laborer, or an assistant hired by the employee, or con *269 tractor, to enter upon Ms premises. To impose responsibility on the sugar company, it would have been necessary for the claimant to show that he was engaged in the “employer’s regular business”: Haugher v. Walker Co., 277 Pa. 506; Callihan v. Montgomery, 272 Pa. 56, 72; McCall v. Bell Telephone Co., 79 Pa. Superior Ct. 505. If so employed, then compensation may be awarded, though the employee is hired by one who lent his service to another, in the course of whose work the accident occurred: Tarr v. Hecla Coal & Coke Co., 265 Pa. 519. Defendant, a refiner of sugar, controlled the wharf where the raw product was received, and from which the manufactured material was removed, but had no part, at any time, in the actual handling of it on the pier, or loading and unloading in the river. This service was always performed by the employees of a stevedoring firm, in this case Loveland & Company. The facts disclosed would not justify a finding that the labor performed was within the line of the “regular business” of the defendant, and hence did not come within the sections of the act above referred to. Nor is the situation altered by article I, section 105, which qualifies the previous provision in directing that the term “contractor,” as there used, shall not include one engaged in “an independent business, other than that of supplying laborers and assistants, in which he serves persons other than the employer in whose service the accident occurs.”

In discussing this section, as affecting those which precede, it was said in Qualp v. Stewart Co., 266 Pa. 502, 507: “This relation of employer to those employed about the premises includes only those whose work is a part of that embraced within the terms of the employer’s contract with the owner. The work of a contractor, on the same premises, in furtherance of the owner’s general plan, on the same structure or enterprise, performing another and different contract with the owner, is, as to the person under consideration, the work of an independent contractor under the law, and his employees or *270 those under him must look to him for compensation. Each is separate and distinct, operating within his own sphere, though engaged on the same general work.” Loveland & Company was engaged in the business of stevedoring not only for defendant but also for others. This occupation is recognized as an independent one: 36 Cyc. 1276; Rankin v. Merchants & Miners Trans. Co., 73 Ga. 229. Such employments are necessary to the general transportation of a cargo: The Senator, 21 Fed. 191. “Formerly, the work was done by the ship’s crew, but, owing to the exigencies of increasing commerce, and the demand for rapidity and special skill, it has become a specialized service” (Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek, 234 U. S. 52, 58 L. ed. 1208), the employees coming within the scope of state compensation laws, dependent upon whether engaged, at the time of injury, about the pier or wharf (State Industrial Commission v. Nordenholt Corp., 259 U. S. 263, 66 L. ed. 933), or around the ship or vessel: State v. Dawson & Co., 264 U. S. 219, 68 L. ed. 339. The stevedoring company, having entire charge of the work to be performed, was an' independent contractor (26 Cyc. 1548), and came within the definition of such, as set forth in our decisions (Simonton v. Morton, 275 Pa. 562; Swartz v. Hanover Borough, 278 Pa. 134), and the plaintiff was its employee.

An effort was made to alter the situation thus presented by producing a contract between the defendant and Atkins & Company, wherein the former agreed to refine the sugar of the latter, and thus fix the sugar company as the contractor, and the stevedoring company as a subcontractor, it being argued that, therefore, the Compensation Act would apply, under article I, section 105, as interpreted in Qualp v. Stewart Co., supra. There is no need to discuss the question of the admissibility of this agreement under the pleadings, as has been done by counsel in their briefs. It was offered, but we are not convinced that, even if properly received, it had *271 the effect insisted upon by defendant. The contract merely provided for the delivery of raw product to the sugar company, which latter was to manufacture, refine and hold, subject to the call of the purchaser. No obligation to assist in transportation to or from the vessel of Atkins & Oo. was imposed. The actual stevedoring service cannot be said to have been furnished as the result of a subcontract. The first five assignments relate to the refusal of the learned court below to give binding instructions to the effect that McGrath’s claim against the sugar company, if any, was under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, or complain of the failure to submit this question to the jury. The relation of the parties, and the legal effect thereof, was, under the circumstances appearing, a matter for the court: Eckert v. Merchants Shipbuilding Corp., 280 Pa. 340. Prom what has been said, it follows that they must all be overruled.

The claim of the plaintiff was based on negligence in piling the sugar without proper binders, as a result of which the stack of bags fell, and also in ordering Mc-Grath to move from a safe to a dangerous place, where he was injured.

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Bluebook (online)
127 A. 780, 282 Pa. 265, 1925 Pa. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-v-pennsylvania-sugar-co-pa-1924.