Noland v. George Tatum Mercantile Co.

313 S.W.2d 633, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 12, 1958
DocketNo. 46314
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 313 S.W.2d 633 (Noland v. George Tatum Mercantile Co.) 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
Noland v. George Tatum Mercantile Co., 313 S.W.2d 633, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 715 (Mo. 1958).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

In this workmen’s compensation case, employer and insurer have appealed from a judgment affirming the order of the industrial commission awarding claimant compensation for permanent total disability and other benefits. We have jurisdiction because the record affirmatively shows that the amount in dispute, exclusive of costs and irrespective of all contingencies, exceeds $7,500. Article 5, Section 3, Constitution of Missouri, 1945, V.A.M.S.

There are two questions: whether the work respondent was doing when injured was casual employment within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Law and, if not, whether the correct formula was applied to determine the amount of compensation payable.

There is little, if any, dispute as to the essential facts and, taking the view of the evidence most favorable to the conclusion of the commission, this statement is justified. Employer, George Tatum Mercantile Company, was a corporation engaged in the general merchandise business at Anderson, Missouri, selling groceries, dry goods, lumber, hardware, furniture, and appliances. Victor Tatum was general manager and vice-president. Robert Mitchell managed the hardware and furniture department which sold, aipong other things, television sets and antennas. Rufus England bought a television for a price which included installation of the set and the antenna. It was the practice and custom for Mr. Mitchell, with the help of Carl Gorlinsky and sometimes of Mr. Drake (both Tatum employees), to install the sets, including the antennas. Usually the antenna mast could be so placed on the roof of a building as to avoid overhanging limbs of adjacent trees. Survey and experimentation at the England home, however, demonstrated that tree limbs so covered the area above the roof that without removing at least one limb and trimming others it would be impossible to extend the mast higher than thirty-five feet above the roof which did not produce a satisfactory picture. So, to accomplish employer’s business, viz., to satisfactorily install the antenna by extending the mast to a height of fifty feet, it was determined after a conference between Mitchell and Victor Tatum that tree trimming was essential and it was also agreed that someone should be employed to do that job.

Mr. Tatum suggested plaintiff because he theretofore had done some tree trimming for the Tatums. Mitchell went to Noland’s home on January 1, 1955, and there employed him to do the necessary tree trimming on the England installation job at $1.50 per hour. Noland immediately followed Mitchell to the England home, taking with him a small, narrow-blade saw. There present, with the company service truck, were corporation employees Mitchell and Gorlinsky. With the use of a rope and ladder from the service truck and under the detailed directions of Mitchell, Noland began the removal of a tree limb and, in the process, fell thirty or forty feet to the ground, resulting in his permanent and total disability.

By the accident date employer had installed about eighty television antennas and the England installation was the first where [635]*635a situation like instant one had been encountered ; that is to say, where overhanging branches so covered a roof as to make it impossible to avoid those branches by locating the antenna mast in a particular place.

For the twenty-five years preceding the accident, Noland had been engaged in farm work, driving a truck, and in caring for yards, and, at the time of his employment by the Tatum Company, was working three days a week at a stave mill where he earned 85 per hour. He had never before been employed by the Tatum Company as distinguished from the Tatums as individuals.

Mr. Tatum testified that an extra employee always was hired on the basis of an 8-hour day if, as we understand his testimony, the job for which he was hired was to last for a day or more. No one knew how long it would have taken Noland to have completed the tree-trimming job, but there was testimony estimating that time as two hours. On January 5, 1955, a ticket was posted to a salary account in Noland’s name on the general ledger of employer corporation, disclosing that $6 had been paid to Noland for four hours’ work at the rate of $1.50 an hour. A treasury department form W-2, showing that 12‡ had been deducted as social security tax, was thereafter furnished to No-land. Employer was open for business every day of the year except Sundays and national holidays. It was agreed that there was no other person working for employer in the same class of employment or who had been employed under the same circumstances as Noland, and it was also agreed that there was no other person in the locality of the casualty in a similar class of employment.

Section 287.090, RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., provides in part that certain provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Law shall not apply to “Employments which are but casual or not incidental to the operation of the usual business of the employer.” Inr stant employer and insurer do not contend that Noland was not an employee, or that he did not suffer an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment, or that his employment was not incidental to the operation of the usual business of George Tatum Mercantile Company. Their sole contention on this aspect of the case is that the employment in which Noland was engaged at the time he was injured was “casual employment” within the meaning of the portion of the statute above quoted.

The compensation act does not define “casual employment” but the court attempted a definition in Sonnenberg v. Berg’s Market, 227 Mo.App. 391, 55 S.W.2d 494, which was approved in Tokash v. General Baking Co., 349 Mo. 767, 163 S.W.2d 554. The definition there set forth was the dictionary meaning of the word “casual” and, as might be expected where much of a total definition as spelled out in the dictionary is applied to a word as that word is used in a specific manner to describe a particular legal concept, it has been difficult, as disclosed by the cases, to satisfactorily apply all the facets of that definition to each subsequent factual situation.

In any event, and sufficient for present purposes, we reiterate that which the cases have heretofore held, viz., that the question is not whether a particular employee is a casual employee. On the contrary, the statute makes it clear that it is the employment which must have been casual in order for the benefits of the Workmen’s Compensation Law to be withheld from an injured employee. Sonnenberg v. Berg’s Market, supra. And thus, neither the length of the employment nor the nature of the employment contract is controlling in determining whether the employment as such was or was not casual. Norris v. Koenig, Mo.App., 183 S.W.2d 160. While some of the cases seem to indicate that one of the tests to be applied in determining whether certain employment was casual is whether there was regularity [636]*636in the times for performance of the employment or whether there was an expectation that the employment would he continuous or regularly recurring, nevertheless, the most reasonable view seems to us to be that the irregularity of the times at which particular employment might arise and the unforeseeability of when and how often such employment might exist are relatively unimportant considerations

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Bluebook (online)
313 S.W.2d 633, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noland-v-george-tatum-mercantile-co-mo-1958.