S. C. Transport Company v. Barnes

85 S.W.2d 721, 191 Ark. 205, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 1, 1935
Docket4-3927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 85 S.W.2d 721 (S. C. Transport Company v. Barnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. C. Transport Company v. Barnes, 85 S.W.2d 721, 191 Ark. 205, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 253 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

Johnson, C. J.

Separate actions were instituted by appellees, Kenneth: C. Barnes, Mrs. Kenneth C. Barnes, Mrs. Arnie Ray, Mrs. Annie Worsham and Clarence Barnes, against appellants, S. & C. Transport Company, a foreign corporation, and S. J. Bago in the Monroe Circuit Court to compensate personal injuries and also the destruction of an automobile, the- property of appellee, Kenneth C. Barnes, which occurred in and by reason of a collision between said automobile and a truck and trailer driven by' appellant Bage on July 7, 1934.

The complaints respectively alleged that Bage was an employee and servant of S. & C. Transport Company at the time of the collision, and was in due performance of his duty as such; that the collision was due to the carelessness and negligence of Bage in suddenly driving his truck and trailer from behind a car which he was following and entering the left side of the highway which was being traveled by appellees, thereby carelessly and negligently striking appellees’ automobile, destroying it, and inflicting the very serious personal injuries complained of.

Appellant S. & C. Transport Company files answers denying all the material allegations of the complaints and specially alleged that Bage was, at the time' of the collision, an independent contractor.

Appellant S. J. Bage answered the complaints of appellees by denying all material allegations thereof and specially affirmed that at the time of the collision he was an independent contractor and not an employee or servant of his co-appellant; moreover, that the collision was due solely to the negligence of Kenneth C. Barnes, the driver of the automobile. The specific negligent acts of Kenneth C. Barnes relied upon by appellant Bage as a defense are not set out in the answer. The several causes were consolidated for trial, and the testimony adduced by appellees, when viewed in the light most favorable to them, warranted the jury in finding: That on July 7, 1934, appellees Kenneth C. Barnes, accompanied by his wife and son, Mrs. Bay and Mrs. Worsham, co-appellees herein, were upon a journey from Madison, Tennessee, to Coleman, Texas, and, while traveling in a westerly direction across the State of Arkansas and at a point near Brinkley, and while driving at a moderate rate of speed and upon the right-hand side of the' highway, were suddenly met head-on by the truck and trailer which was being driven by appellant Bage; that the Barnes automobile was completely wrecked by the impact, and appellees and each of them received very serious and more or. less painful and permanent injuries on account of said collision; that at and prior to the collision appellant Bage was driving a truck which was drawing a large trailer, the property of ■ S. & C. Transport Company, and was returning to East St. Louis from-a trip to Southwest Arkansas where a delivery of a load of new automobiles had been effected under the directions and control of the said S. & C. Transport Company.

The testimony on behalf of appellants was to the effect that Bage owned the tiuek and had borrowed the trailer from his co-appellant for use in making deliveries of new'automobiles, and that-appellant, S. & C. Transport Company, had nothing to do with the directions or control of the manner and-means of effecting deliveries of the cars which were being transported. Moreover, that Bage at the time of the collision was transporting a car owned by one Mr. Darby under a private contract of hire, and was therefore not in performance of any duty for the master while engaged in this private enterprise.

Instructions were given by the trial court to the jury, in charge which will be hereinafter adverted to covering all issues of fact reflected by the testimony. The jury returned verdicts in favor of appellees and against appellants jointly as follows:

Kenneth C. Barnes..................................................................................$10,000
Mrs. Kenneth C. Barnes.....................................................,............... 10,000
Mrs. Ray .............................................................................................:......:....... 10,000
Mrs. Worsham............................................................................................. 10,000
Clarence Barnes ............:.................................-...........:............................. 3,500

On the presentation of appellants’ motion for new trial, the court reduced the above awards as follows:

Kenneth C. Barnes to....:............................................................................$5,000
Mrs. Kenneth C. Barnes to............................................................. 4,000
Mrs. Arnie Ray to.......................................................-................................... 4,500
Mrs. Annie Worsham to............................................:........................... 3,750
Clarence Barnes to........................................................................................2,000

and entered judgments accordingly, and thereupon overruled said motion for new trial. Both appellees and appellants saved proper exceptions and have appealed and cross-appealed respectively from the modified judgments.

Appellant S. & C. Transport Company’s'primary contention for reversal is that as a matter of law Bage, the driver of the truck and trailer at the time of the collision, was an independent contractor — directing and controlling the manner and means of carrying on his business, and that therefore the liability to appellees, if any, falls upon Bage and not it.

The trial court submitted this issue of fact to the jury under instructions,-the form of which are not here complained of, and we think' properly so. Appellant S. &'C. Transport Company’s president,-Mr. Smith, testified that their headquarters were situated in-East St. Louis, and it operates eight or nine trucks and trailers in ten or tw'elve different States under licenses and permits issued by the respective States; that his company procured the order for hauling the cars transported by Bage and furnished to him the permit- to operate in this State; that his company collected the charges for delivering the-new cars and paid to Bage 75 per cent, of the amount collected; that, under the directions of witness, Bage had the name of “S. & C. Transport Company” painted on both sides of his truck; that safe delivery of the new cars hauled by Bage was guaranteed by the S. & C'. Company, and its responsibility in this behalf was insured by an insurer. Under repeated decisions of this court, the above testimony is amply sufficient to support the jury’s finding that the relationship existing between appellant S. & C. Transport Company and Bage was that of master and servant or employer and employee and not an independent contractor. Monk v. Jones, 190 Ark. 1117; Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Johnson, 149 Ark. 553, 233 S. W. 680; Ellis & Lewis v.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W.2d 721, 191 Ark. 205, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-c-transport-company-v-barnes-ark-1935.