Messina v. Richard Baird Co.

147 N.E.2d 805, 337 Mass. 8, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 605
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 147 N.E.2d 805 (Messina v. Richard Baird Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Messina v. Richard Baird Co., 147 N.E.2d 805, 337 Mass. 8, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 605 (Mass. 1958).

Opinion

Whittemore, J.

These are the defendant’s exceptions to the denial of its motions for a directed verdict and for a verdict under leave reserved. The jury, taking the evidence *9 most favorably for the plaintiffs, could have found facts as follows: The minor plaintiff (hereinafter called the plaintiff), a girl seven or eight years of age, was injured on March 31, 1953, when she tripped and fell in passing through the rear doorway of the house in Revere owned by her parents in which she lived with her family. The plaintiff tripped on a piece of wood, a two-by-four, which had been nailed to the threshold by a workman, one Webb, about two weeks before March 31 in the course of installing an aluminum door pursuant to a contract for door and window installation between the plaintiff’s father and mother and the defendant. The two-by-four extended the full length of the threshold and had been installed by Webb without instructions from or prior knowledge of any other person. It was so placed as to be flush with the inner side of the door in its closed position in order to block the entrance of the elements through a space under the door which resulted from a sag in the building and a consequent slope in the threshold. The space was about one and five eighths inches high at the lower end of the threshold and tapered out to nothing at the other end. The doorway had been measured prior to the date of installation of the door and the door had been built on the premises of the defendant.

The evidence of the relationship between the defendant corporation and the workman at the time of the installation was ambiguous and confusing. From the testimony of Webb, the jury could have concluded, with reasonable construction of ambiguities, as follows: In 1952 and in 1953 until a date after the subject installation the workman was on the payroll of “Warner Doormaster Company,” which was not identified as a corporation, a partnership or an independent proprietorship, but which was affiliated in some way with the defendant, Richard Baird Company. The man who signed his payroll checks “stamped Warner Door” was the manager or owner of the defendant. The defendant, was a “sales outfit.” “Warner Door” “contracted] as the worker . . . [and] did their work for them.” The defendant did install also but “handle[d] mostly windows in their *10 outfit.” Later in 1953 Webb went to work for the defendant as a service man. Webb was ordered to do the work by one Sweet who was “connected with, or one of . . . [his] superiors at Warner Doormaster.” Sweet was originally with the defendant company, but “was at Warner Door-master at that time.” Work which Webb did in or about 1952 was work for the defendant. 1

From the testimony of the general manager of the defendant, given prior to Webb’s testimony, the jury could have found the following facts, not inconsistent with the foregoing: Only the general manager, a shop foreman and an outside man were on the defendant’s payroll directly. The storm door installer, Webb, worked for the defendant at one time, sometime in 1953; at the time the door was installed he was not on salary with the defendant. He “was sent to the plaintiffs’ premises by a foreman of the defendant company,” 2 to do the work which was being done *11 “in accordance with . . . [the] agreement” with the plaintiff’s parents.

Other testimony of the general manager, possibly inconsistent with Webb’s, must be noticed, namely: The installation was done on “piecework.” There were twenty salesmen or applicators working for the defendant on “piecework.” The installer of the doors at the plaintiff’s house “normally . . . worked with a cousin as an independent contractor.” “That was the term ... we gave them in the business.”

The plaintiff’s older sister saw the two-by-four installed and pointed it out to the plaintiff. When the plaintiff’s mother arrived home in the evening after her daughter was hurt she saw the two-by-four and on the following day she “called the company”; the night she arrived home she called the salesman who had negotiated the contract but did not get hold of him. The glass in the door was broken by the fall and had not been replaced up to the time of trial (February, 1957) and the two-by-four was still in place. The plaintiff’s father did not call the company when he saw the two-by-four but he spoke to his wife about it. The defendant had “records of service complaints [at the property] and . . . some had been rectified.”

The judge submitted to the jury three questions: “Was . . . Webb an agent or employee of the defendant when he put the door in? Was there any negligence on the part of Webb in putting that two-by-four in the place? Did this little girl trip over the two-by-four, in consequence of which she went through the lower pane of glass in the door?” To each question the jury answered “Yes.”

The evidence permitted the conclusion that Webb was *12 sufficiently the agent or employee of the defendant to charge the defendant with Webb’s negligence. The jury could have found that Webb was working under the direction of a foreman of the defendant. Acceptance of Webb’s testimony that he was employed and paid by “Warner Doormaster Company” did not require rejection of the testimony of the defendant’s general manager, stated in the bill of exceptions in narrative form without qualification, that “The installer of the storm doors was sent to the plaintiffs’ premises by a foreman of the defendant company.” Perhaps the general manager was intending this to be understood as stating the fact only if the work had been done at a time when Webb was doing piecework for the defendant, and was not on the “Warner Doormaster Company” payroll. He was uncertain in his testimony. We do not think, however, that his testimony was such that the jury had to accept or reject all of it. See Cosman v. Donovan, 282 Mass. 224, 228; DiManno v. DiManno, 332 Mass. 709, 711; compare Sullivan v. Boston Elevated Railway, 224 Mass. 405, 406. The testimony of the general manager and of Webb was consistent with “Warner Doormaster Company” having been a division or department of the defendant, with separate bank account, but without separate legal identity, so that even if Sweet was a “shop foreman” for “Warner,” he was as such in law a foreman of the defendant. Even if Warner had been an independent legal entity, the jury could have found that orders to Webb were given by one who, if a foreman for Warner, was-also foreman for the defendant. Nothing that the general manager and Webb testified to was necessarily inconsistent with this. On this premise the evidence permits the conclusion that, though paid by Warner, Webb was a borrowed employee for whose acts the defendant was responsible, inasmuch as he was doing business of the defendant, and business which was directly within the scope of the defendant’s enterprise. Smith: Scope of the Business: The Borrowed Servant Problem, 38 Mich. L. Rev. 1222, 1233 et seq.; 1248 et seq. Hasty v. Sears, 157 Mass. 123, 124, and cases cited. Langevin’s Case, 326 Mass. 43, 47 — 48. *13

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.E.2d 805, 337 Mass. 8, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messina-v-richard-baird-co-mass-1958.