Pooler v. Sargent Lumber Co.

94 A. 754, 113 Me. 426, 1915 Me. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 12, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 A. 754 (Pooler v. Sargent Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pooler v. Sargent Lumber Co., 94 A. 754, 113 Me. 426, 1915 Me. LEXIS 171 (Me. 1915).

Opinion

Hanson, J.

An action on the case to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff while upon the premises of the defendant, reported for the determination of this court.

The defendant is owner of a saw mill, dam and piling ground at South Brewer. There is a pond between the mill and piling ground. The dam extends from the mill to the piling place, and refuse from the mill is carried to the piling pl'ace on a tramway built across the dam. The plant of the Eastern Manufacturing Company is eight hundred feet west of the westerly end of the defendant’s dam. The tramway over the dam extends to the mill of the Eastern Manufacturing Company.

The logs in process of manufacture at the time of the injury complained of, belonged to the Bangor Lumber Company, and the waste therefrom belonged to that company. By agreement of the three companies the waste was to be hauled in box cars by the defendant or its agents across the dam, where the cars were to be taken by the Eastern Manufacturing Company’s men and hauled on the defendant’s land and tracks to the Eastern Manufacturing Company’s mill. The part of the mill where the cars in question were loaded is elevated several feet above the top of the dam. The custom pursued for many years was to start the car from the end of the mill and allow it to run down the grade under the control of an operator who controlled the car over the incline by the use of a brake and then set it free to run across the top of the dam to the point of delivery at the end of the dam.

The plaintiff was a servant of the Eastern Manufacturing Company and for nearly two months had hauled the cars from the end of the dam to its mill, and was so employed on the day of the injury.

When the plaintiff reached the dam at the time in question the cars were not ready, and he sat down to await their arrival. His [428]*428load would be made up of two cars, the first of which in reaching a point two rods from the westerly end of the dam, left the rails and stopped. What then occurred is shown by the record:—

Q. Mr. Pooler, coming to the morning of the accident, you were accustomed to wait for the cars to be brought across the dam?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Were you waiting there on the morning of the accident?

A. Yes, I drove along and stood there, sat there, a few minutes.

Q. Whether or not you saw a car coming across the bridge or across the dam, the track?

Q. Who was in charge of the car?
A. Mr. Theal.
Q. How was he bringing the car across the track?

A. He was shoving the car across. He was on the back side shoving it over towards me.

Q. What happened to the car?

A. The car run as far as that switch and run off. I was settin’ there, when he says: “Joe, come over and give us a lift;” and I says “Sure thing!” So I walked over and got hold of the car.

Q. You say that you agreed and took hold of the car with Mr. Theal?

A. Yes, sir. We were lifting the car up; took hold of the car so fashion (indicating) and lifted it up.

Q. Where did Mr. Theal stand?

A. On the left side of me, that corner (indicating). The car run off on the left side of the track. That brought me about in the middle, along there (indicating) a little mite more on the side, but inside the tracks. I got hold of this car so fashion (indicating) and pulled on that end. We started to lift and we thought we had the car on.

Q. You moved the car, did you, when you first lifted?

A. We lifted, but it didn’t come on to the track. We thought we had it — I thought we did have it. I stood up so fashion (indicating) and I felt a kind of jar — the dam was just back of us — and I kind of whirled around, and when I did the car was right on me.

Mr. Theal, at whose request the plaintiff entered the defendant’s premises to assist in replacing the car upon the track, was employed [429]*429and paid by one Davis, who for several years had removed the refuse from defendant’s mill at a stipulated sum per day, and a like amount if the work was performed at night.

Much space has been devoted by counsel to a discussion of the status of Mr. Davis, — the plaintiff asserting that he was the servant of the defendant merely and that the defendant was in all respects liable to the plaintiff for the negligence of that servant as well as for its own negligence, while the defendant asserts that Mr. Davis was an independent contractor, and that if the plaintiff was injured through the negligence of Davis he alone was liable therefor.

But, .the plaintiff says that if Mr. Davis was an independent contractor, the defendant is still hable because 1, the injury claimed resulted from the negligence of th'e defendant in maintaining the track, and cars, so used, and 2, that the injury was such as might have been anticipated by him, as the probable consequence of the work and he failed to take proper precaution to prevent it. Finally, that defendant having duties it could not delegate was therefore liable.

We think the record sufficiently established the claim that Davis was in fact an independent contractor, but we do not hold that such finding necessarily affects the plaintiff’s rights in this case.

The fact that the owner of the premises on which work is to be done by an employee retains control thereof does not prevent the employee being an independent contractor. 26 Cyc., 1551.d. Boomer v. Wilbur, 176 Mass., 482.

One may be an independent contractor, although not to be paid a round sum for his work, as when paid by the day, or the cost of the work, and a per cent. 26 Cyc., 1551, and cases cited. In Weilbacker v. J. W. Putts Co., Md. Court of Appeals, Apl. 1914. 91 Atlantic, 343, the owner of a building contracted with a painter to paint it, he to furnish the appliances and employ the labor therefor, the owner not retaining any supervision of the work or any control of the men. The contractor used a loose guy line which allowed the stage to slip and the contractor fell therefrom and struck the plaintiff as she was passing on the sidewalk below. Held, that the negligence was the negligence of an independent contractor for which the owner was not hable,' — and further, the conditions were not such that the injury might have been anticipated by the owner as the probable consequence of the work if he failed to take the proper precaution to pre[430]*430vent it, and hence the owner is not liable, although if the injury had been such that he should have anticipated it, he would have been hable.

We are in full accord with the rule invoked by the plaintiff that if the owner of premises under his control employs an independent contractor to do work upon them, which from its nature is likely to render the premises dangerous to persons who may come upon them by the owner’s invitation, the owner, by reason of the contract, is not relieved from the obligation of seeing that due care is used to protect such persons. Curtis v. Kilby et al., 153 Mass., 123, and cases cited.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 754, 113 Me. 426, 1915 Me. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pooler-v-sargent-lumber-co-me-1915.