Parks v. E. M. Carmell Co.

79 S.W.2d 285, 168 Tenn. 385, 4 Beeler 385, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 70
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 79 S.W.2d 285 (Parks v. E. M. Carmell Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parks v. E. M. Carmell Co., 79 S.W.2d 285, 168 Tenn. 385, 4 Beeler 385, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 70 (Tenn. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Special Justice Edward J. Smith

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Claiming that he lost a thumb as an employee of E. M. Carmell Company, Parks filed a petition under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Code 1932, section 6851 et seq.) against the employer and its insurance carrier.

The undisputed facts are that E. M. Carmell Company was the subcontractor for installing the plumbing and steam heating in the new post office building at Nashville. T. M. Lester, who operated a trucking company in Nashville, had been employed by the company to deliver plumbing and steam heating materials and equip- . ment, including two boilers, from the railroad yards to the post office site.

*387 As the employees of Lester were not members of a labor union, and as the general contract, awarded to Messer & Sons, provided that only union labor could be employed on the work, a protest was made against Lester’s men being allowed to do the work for which they had been employed by the company.

Kleuver, the labor representative of the structural ironworkers, insisted that the removal of the boilers from Lester’s truck, and placing them in position for installation by the steam fitters, was work properly to be done by structural ironworkers. Foley, the labor representative of the steam fitters, insisted that the work was of a kind that should be done by the steam fitters.

Being unable to settle the controversy, the matter was taken for adjustment to Mr. Willing, who was the superintendent of the general contractors, Messer & Sons. Willing ruled that Lester’s men, being nonunion men, could not be employed to do this work, and that structural ironworkers, and 'not steam fitters, were the proper men to do it. Willing further ruled that, if the superintendent of E. M. Carmell Company did not use structural ironworkers for the purpose of removing the boilers from Lester’s truck and putting them in position to be installed by the steam fitters, he would charge E. M. Carmell Company with the amount that the structural ironworkers would have earned if they had been allowed to do the work.

Over the protest of Foley, Couch, the superintendent of E. M. Carmell Company, employed Kleuver, and three or four other men, bne of whom was Parks, to remove the boilers from Lester’s truck and place them in a position in the building where the steam fitters could connect them.

The proof shows that Parks was a structural iron-worker, and had, for some weeks, been employed by *388 Crawford Weigle Company as such. Parks and thé other structural ironworkers employed to do the work were directly employed by Couch, and were paid by him at a stated price per hour. It was estimated that the time required for removing the boilers and putting them in place for the steam fitters would require about a week; as a matter of fact, it required a week and fourteen hours.

On October 30, 1933, after he had been working but several hours, Parks’ thumb was crushed by being caught by a cable winding off a drum, and at a time when he and his coemployees were raising the boiler from Lester’s truck which was rigged with Lester’s equipment. Parks had never worked in any capacity for E. M. Carmell Company before or after October 30, 1933.

The proof shows that moving plumbing and heating equipment from depots to the place where such'articles are to be installed is a part of the regular course of business of plumbing and steam heating contractors; that in some places this work is handled by ironworkers, and in others by steam fitters, and that the question of which class of met will do the work depends on the locality in which it is done and the terms of the contract; that, if union labor is str.ong in a certain locality, and the contract provides for the employment of union labor only, such work is done by structural ironworkers.

In most instances, however, work of the- kind Parks was engaged in is done by ironworkers, as they are better riggers than are steam fitters.

It is true that E. M. Carmell Company had employed Lester to do the work, but the fact that he was barred from its performance, and the work ordered to'be done by structural ironworkers, can in no manner be attributed to Parks, for he was employed by Couch, superintendent of E. M-. Carmell Company, and was doing work which *389 Couch testified was of the character required to be done in the ordinary and regular course of the business of plumbing and steam fitting, in which E. M. Carmell Company was engaged.

The defendants insist that, at the time Parks received the injury complained of, he was a temporary-or emergency employee, that under the contract of employment he had no reasonable ground to expect that he would be called on by the employer to do any further work, and consequently he was a casual employee as defined by section 6856 (b) of the Code.

The trial judge held that Parks had never been regularly in the service of E. M. Carmell Company as an employee, as defined by section 6852 (b), but was merely temporarily employed in an emergency with no thought of engaging regularly in the employ of the company, and was therefore a casual employee, as defined by section 6856 (b).

Accordingly, the petition was dismissed.

The sole question presented for decision is whether the trial judge correctly construed section 6856 (b).

Evidently the trial judge construed section 6852 (b), which defines “employee,” in pari materia with section 6856 (b), which defines “casual employees.” In other words, it was his opinion that section 6856 (b), which provides: “Any person whose employment at the time of injury is casual, that is, one who is not employed in the usual course of trade, business, profession, or occupation, of the employer, ’ ’ should be construed in connection with section 6852 (b), which provides: “ ‘Employee’ shall include every person, including a minor, in the service of an employer, as ‘employer’ is defined in paragraph (a) above, under any contract of hire, apprenticeship, writ *390 ten or implied. Any reference herein to an employee who has been injured shall, when the employee is dead, also include his legal representatives, dependents and other persons to whom compensation may be payable, under this chapter.”

If this construction of section 6856 (b) is to be upheld, it will be necessary for the court to reform the definition furnished by the statute and cause the section, as reformed, to read: “Any person whose employment at the time of the injury is casual, that is, one whose employment is casual, or is not in the usual course of trade, business, occupation, or profession of the employer.”

Such a construction would prescribe a biform test of casual employment, and perforce would destroy the unitary test prescribed by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W.2d 285, 168 Tenn. 385, 4 Beeler 385, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-e-m-carmell-co-tenn-1935.