Metzinger v. H. A. Dailey, Inc.

216 S.W.2d 480, 358 Mo. 689, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 623
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 13, 1948
DocketNo. 40665.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 216 S.W.2d 480 (Metzinger v. H. A. Dailey, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metzinger v. H. A. Dailey, Inc., 216 S.W.2d 480, 358 Mo. 689, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 623 (Mo. 1948).

Opinions

Action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of defendant's negligence. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for $40,000 and defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff was employed by defendant as an ironworker foreman in construction work in the City of St. Louis. He was seriously injured on June 25, 1946, by reason of the falling of the elevator of a hoist which had been erected by defendant and was being used in connection with the construction of a building.

The essential issue presented on this appeal concerns the application of the Workmen's Compensation Law, which plaintiff alleged would be applicable, except that his earnings exceeded the maximum fixed by Sec. 3695(a) R.S. 1939. Defendant-appellant contends that the court should have directed a verdict in its favor, because *Page 692 on "the undisputed evidence . . . plaintiff was an employee whose average annual earnings did not exceed $3600."

Plaintiff began work for defendant, as an ironworker in February 1946 On March 29, 1946, he became an ironworker foreman and was working as such when he was injured. As an ironworker foreman, the plaintiff was paid the prevailing union wage scale in the City of St. Louis, which scale, prior to May 1, 1946, was $2.02½ per hour, or $16.20 for an eight hour day. After that date, the prevailing wage scale was $2.25 per hour or $18.00 per day for an eight hour day. Plaintiff earned $972.55 between March 29, and June 25, 1946. His average weekly earnings as an ironworker foreman, working 23 to 43 hours per week, was $74.81 for the whole period, or $83.59 per week after the increase in wages.

The evidence further tended to show that during a period of five years, prior to June 25, 1946, there was work available for ironworker foremen to work throughout the working days of the year; that all could work every day at the union scale, if they wanted to; that, when a man left one contractor, because work had ceased for any reason, he reported back to the business agent or secretary of the union and was sent out immediately on a new job with another contractor without loss of time; and that the average annual earnings of men in the craft, during the five year period, were in excess of $3600.

Plaintiff offered four witnesses, who had been ironworker foremen for 3, 10, 21 and 25 years, respectively. They had worked for construction contractors in the City of St. Louis and, during the five year period, prior to June 25, 1946, their "annual earnings," figured on a calendar year basis, far exceeded $3600. Each witness [482] earned in excess of $3600 in 1946 and about half of that amount prior to June 25, 1946. One had averaged over $4000 per year for 6 or 8 years. One had worked for sixteen different contractors in one year and another for 12 to 15 contractors in a single year. One had worked for one company for four years. There was a shortage of ironworker foremen and, if work was not available with one contractor on account of the weather or for any other cause, there was some kind of work immediately available with another contractor, in either outside or inside work. None of plaintiff's witnesses, other than plaintiff, had worked for defendant within the five year period prior to June 25, 1946. Defendant did not deny or dispute the testimony of these ironworker foreman witnesses concerning their earnings, but objected to its competency and relevancy to any issue in the case.

Defendant offered the testimony of two ironworker foremen employed by it, Schrader and Panchot, together with the record of each employee's earnings. Schrader had worked for defendant four and one-half years, three and one-half years as an ironworker foreman. *Page 693 He worked steadily for defendant, although he put in a day or so for others once in a while. He was paid the union scale before and after May 1, 1946. In 1946, he earned $3830.30; in 1945, $3096; and in 1944, $2600; and he did not exceed $3600 in 1943. The records showed that he worked 228 days (not all full days) from June 26, 1945 to June 25, 1946 and earned $3405.75; from June 26, 1944 to June 25, 1945, he worked 231 days or parts of days and earned $3403.15; and from June 26, 1943 to June 25, 1944, he worked 96 days as a foreman (he was not a foreman during the entire period) and he earned $1139.85. Schrader had no yearly contract with defendant. When defendant finished a job, Schrader was free to go to some other contractor or wait until defendant began another job. There was work with other contractors, if he wanted to do it, and he could work at nights for others, if he wanted to, or he could stay at home, work around home or do something else. Defendant's work for ironworker foremen had, at times, been as low as 143 days a year and witness had gone five or six weeks without working. Sometimes he worked "off and on" for defendant at his own choice.

Panchot worked for defendant for 224 days during the period from June 25, 1945 to June 25, 1946. He drew the union scale and earned $3548. During this period he worked a couple of days for another employer. He worked a part of each week, except for the period from December 12, 1945 to January 9, 1946 when he was off for some cause, perhaps hunting, a strike or bad weather. Schrader did not work during the same period. From June 25, 1944 to June 25, 1945, Panchot worked 228 days and earned less than $3600. From June 25, 1943 to June 25, 1944, he worked 154 days and earned $1883.50 and from June 25, 1942 to June 25, 1943, he worked 118 days and earned $1411.85. There were days when he "just didn't go to work." He said that he had a clubhouse and was single and could stay off from work and enjoy himself when he wanted to. He had no contract by the year with defendant and he had the choice of resuming work each week or reporting to the union to go out on another job with another contractor. Both Schrader and Panchot could have found work elsewhere when defendant was not operating, but they chose to wait until defendant had work for them.

The testimony of defendant's witnesses was not controverted in the trial nor here, except that respondent insists that neither Panchot nor Schrader worked steadily; and that their testimony was insufficient to support a finding of the average annual earnings of persons of the same class in the same employment and location.

[1] Instruction 1, in part, conditioned a verdict for plaintiff upon a finding ". . . that it was the custom in said employment to operate throughout the working days of the year . . . and that the average annual earnings of ironworker foreman in the same class in *Page 694 the same employment in the City of St. Louis during the year immediately preceding plaintiff's injury were in excess of $3600 per year . . ."

Section 3695(a) R.S. 1939 defines the word "employee," as used in [483] the Workmen's Compensation Law, and adds these words "but shall not include persons whose average annual earnings exceed three thousand six hundred dollars." (Italics ours). Appellant contends that Sec. 3695 is "an independent statute and not dependent on nor necessary to be harmonized" with Sec. 3710 R.S. 1939; and that, since plaintiff had not worked one year for defendant and had not earned more than $3600, he was under the Act as a matter of law and entitled to its benefits. Section 3695 does not define "earnings," nor provide how they shall be determined, but another section, Sec. 3710, prescribes the basis for computing compensation. In the case of Sayles v. Kansas City Structural Steel Company, 344 Mo. 756, 128 S.W.2d 1046

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W.2d 480, 358 Mo. 689, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metzinger-v-h-a-dailey-inc-mo-1948.