Ponthieux v. Lindsay

226 So. 2d 482, 254 La. 647, 264 La. 647
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 27, 1969
Docket49549
StatusPublished

This text of 226 So. 2d 482 (Ponthieux v. Lindsay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ponthieux v. Lindsay, 226 So. 2d 482, 254 La. 647, 264 La. 647 (La. 1969).

Opinion

226 So.2d 482 (1969)
254 La. 647

Joe PONTHIEUX
v.
Bill LINDSAY and Charles Lowther.

No. 49549.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

June 27, 1969.
Rehearing Denied October 8, 1969.

Roy & Roy, Marksville, David Sheffield, Alexandria, Chris J. Roy, Marksville, for plaintiff-relator.

Gold, Hall & Skye, William E. Skye, Alexandria, for defendant-respondent-appellee.

HAMITER, Justice.

Involved in this cause is a claim for workmen's compensation benefits.

Charles Lowther, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, is now and has been for many years solely a life insurance agent. His father owned a certain piece of property in Alexandria on which were several houses which had been converted into two and four-unit apartments. The elder Lowther lived in one and rented the others. During or about the latter part of 1965 Lowther sold his property, and in the act of sale he obligated himself to remove the buildings within a stipulated time, in default of which the vendee was authorized to have them removed at the vendor's expense (for which purpose an agreed upon sum—$10,000—was retained from the sale price).

Lowther contracted with another party for the sale and removal of the buildings, but this party defaulted on the agreement. The defendant then consulted with his father, relative to the latter's obligation to remove the improvements, and he decided that the buildings could be moved to another piece of property and their rental continued. To this end he purchased some land in his own name and contracted with one Bill Lindsay (the other person sued) to move the houses onto it, and also with one Neilson Bonnette to cut the houses in preparation for their removal. Bonnette employed Joe Ponthieux, the plaintiff herein, as a laborer to assist in the cutting operation.

*483 While so employed plaintiff fell from the roof of one of the buildings and was injured. The instant suit was filed against the defendant and Lindsay to recover workmen's compensation benefits for disability allegedly resulting from the fall.

For procedural reasons, not necessary to detail here, a judgment on the merits of the claim against Lindsay was delayed. Ultimately the demand was rejected by a judgment which is now final, and Lindsay is no longer a party to these proceedings.

The trial court dismissed plaintiff's claim against this defendant on the merits, and its judgment was affirmed on appeal. 216 So.2d 407. We granted certiorari at the instance of plaintiff. 253 La. 68, 216 So.2d 548.

Presented for our consideration is only the question of defendant's (Charles Lowther's) liability for compensation benefits. The plaintiff contends that it attaches by virtue of LRS 23:1061 which provides: "Where any person (in this section referred to as principal) undertakes to execute any work, which is a part of his trade, business, or occupation for which he had contracted to perform, and contracts with any person (in this section referred to as contractor) for the execution by or under the contractor of the whole or any part of the work undertaken by the principal, the principal shall be liable to pay to any employee employed in the execution of the work or to his dependent, any compensation under this Chapter which he would have been liable to pay if the employee had been immediately employed by him; * * *."

The issue to be determined is whether the defendant, the so-called principal, must pay compensation benefits for injuries sustained by the employee of his independent contractor, Bonnette. And for the purpose of determining that issue we have studied the record, and we have made the following factual conclusions.

We are of the opinion that the Court of Appeal correctly found that the defendant had no intention of moving and relocating the houses as a business venture for his own personal benefit. Our thought is that the circumstances support his uncontradicted testimony that all of his efforts were bent toward assisting his aged and ill father (who has since died) and his mother.

When the removal occurred the time given the elder Lowther was running out, and the defendant undertook the project for his father (who was physically unable to attend to the matter himself) in an attempt to avoid the latter's suffering a financial loss. The course pursued, he felt, would prevent a forfeiture of the amount retained by the vendee, and when completed it would provide a source of income for his parents. When half of the units were ready for occupancy (there would be twenty in all) he transferred title to the land and the improvements to his mother who, as defendant expressed it, "put up what money was used in the thing. I had no money myself."

Under these circumstances we do not hesitate to conclude that the defendant was not in the business of moving, constructing, restoring or repairing houses. This was merely a one-time operation entered into by him to assist his father.

Plaintiff, however, contends that the record shows that the defendant entered into the negotiations as a business venture from which he himself intended to realize a profit by renting the completed units. And he argues that, therefore, his actions in moving and reconstructing the buildings constituted his entering the trade, business or occupation of house moving, construction, and repair of buildings, and that he is liable for compensation benefits, under LRS 23:1061, just as if he had hired the plaintiff himself. This is obviously not so. The defendant's only business was that of an insurance agent. He had never undertaken the moving, repair or construction of buildings either before or since this operation, and he testified that he knew nothing of the details of such a business. If, indeed, he intended to use the buildings for his own profit the only *484 business he would have been engaged in was that of the rental of dwellings, and this is not a hazardous occupation.

Nevertheless, the plaintiff insists that when a person employs contractors to perform work requiring the hiring of laborers to engage in a hazardous engagement, and it inures to the benefit of his otherwise non-hazardous business, such work is part of his regular occupation which becomes hazardous; and that, consequently, the principal is liable for compensation benefits to the employees.

It is, of course, well established that the purpose of LRS 23:1061 is to prevent the evasion of the compensation provisions of the law by contracting out part of the principal's regular and hazardous occupation or his contractural obligation and, therefore, he is not liable in compensation unless he would have been obligated had he himself undertaken to do the work and hired the injured employee himself. This is pointed out, because in some of the cases hereinafter cited a plaintiff-employee was engaged to do hazardous work by an independent contractor, while in others he was hired to do it by the principal himself.

An examination of the cases reveals that the arguments presented by the plaintiff herein are not new. They have been urged in this court on several occasions and also in the various Courts of Appeal. Consistently they have been rejected.

One of the earliest of such cases is Shipp v. Bordelon, 152 La. 795, 94 So. 399 (1922), and it is a leading decision on the subject. Therein the opinion shows that the plaintiff was injured while doing repair work on a house on the plantation or farm of the defendant who was a practicing physician.

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White v. Equitable Real Estate Co.
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Lay v. Pugh
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Ponthieux v. Lindsay
226 So. 2d 482 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
226 So. 2d 482, 254 La. 647, 264 La. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ponthieux-v-lindsay-la-1969.