Samford v. Petroleum Casualty Co.

81 S.W.2d 743, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 19, 1935
DocketNo. 2719.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 81 S.W.2d 743 (Samford v. Petroleum Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samford v. Petroleum Casualty Co., 81 S.W.2d 743, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 394 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This is a compensation case filed in district court of Shelby county by appellee, Petroleum Casualty Company, against appellant, E. Samford, wherein appellee was the compensation insurance carrier, appellant the alleged employee, and Humble Oil & Refining Company the employer. No assignment is before us on the pleadings. The controlling issue in the court below was whether or not appellant at the time of his injury was an “employee.” Judgment was for ap-pellee denying appellant’s claim for compensation on trial in the lower court to the court without a jury. The following statement is taken from the court’s conclusions of fact: On the 15th day of May, 1932, J. M. Oats was in. the employment of Humble Oil & Refining Company as its wholesale commission agent for Center, Tex., and the contiguous territory, and continued in that employment until after May 20, 1933. His duties were to sell and distribute in his territory “the goods and products” supplied by his employer, to make the required reports, to collect the money due his employer, to make the required remittances, and to look after all property placed in his charge and to account therefor. His contract was in writing, and read in part as follows: “Agent shall hire, at his expense, such laborers and assistants as shall be necessary, in accomplishing the purposes of his agency hereunder, such laborers and assistants to be his employees, and subject only to his control and direction, and for whose acts and conduct and the loss and damage resulting therefrom agent shall be responsible and liable. Agent shall not employ any person for or on behalf of company except by special written permission of the company, and then only to perform the work so designated in writing. Agent shall pay all expenses incident to the operation and maintenance of said station, including, without limiting the foregoing, expense of gas, electric light and power, telephone, fuel, ice, and water.”

Oats was required to employ local commission agents to operate his employer’s service stations in Center and contiguous territory, with the limitation that he could employ neither a partnership nor a corporation to operate a service station. We quote as follows from the court’s conclusions of fact:

“3. I find that prior to May 20, 1933, Cross-plaintiff, E. Samford, and R. J. Bridges, entered into negotiations with J. M. Oates, seeking to make a contract with Humble Oil & Refining Company, to become commission agents and to operate thereunder the Company’s #3129 Service Station, located on Cora Street in Center, Texas, which was *744 then being operated by one T. L. Patterson, said agency and station to be operated by them as partners; that J. M. Oates informed said Samford and Bridges that the Company would not contract with a partnership or a corporation; that said J. M. Oates agreed to contract such agency to R. J. Bridges with full knowledge of the fact that said Station #3129 would be operated by R. J. Bridges and E. Samford as partners, in which the said J. M. Oates acquiesced, but which he did not make known to Humble Oil & Refining Company.
“4. I find that on May 20, 1933, the Humble Oil & Refining Company and R. J. Bridges entered into a written contract, under the terms of which R. J. Bridges was appointed as commission agent, at Humble Oil and Refining Company’s service station #3129, on Cora Street, Center, Texas, which contract was signed by R. J. Bridges, witnessed by J. M. Oates, and forwarded to Houston, Texas, for execution by the company, and there signed for the Company by its Assistant Sales Manager, all of which was well known to and acquiesced in by cross-plaintiff, E. Samford.
“5. I find that on said May 20, 1933, Humble Oil & Refining Company, acting by and through J. M. Oates, ‘checked in’ R. J. Bridges as commission agent at said station, signing for said purpose, and as evidence of the amount of different sorts of products on hand, and ‘inventory of bulk stock and settlement for sales,’ and „that R. J. Bridges signed the same as ‘Service Station Agent’ all of which was well known .to, and acquiesced in by cross-plaintiff, B. Samford.
“6. I find that on said date, R. J. Bridges, was agent for said company under a former contract, under which he was operating another station in Center, personally, and that cross-plaintiff, E. Samford,, took personal charge of Station #3129, under his partnership agreement with R. J. Bridges, and looked after its operation until said Bridges closed out his other station, and moved to . Station #3129, which was known to J. M. Oates, but not to any officer or any other agent of Humble Oil & Refining Company.
“7. I find that thereafter, up to and including the 19th day of July, 1933, the said cross-plaintiff, E. Samford, and the said R. J. Bridges as partners, were in possession of and operated said Service Station #3129, which was at all times known to J. M. Oates, and was also known to Howard' C. Parker, who, prior to July 19, 1933, succeeded J. M. Oates as Wholesale Commission Agent at Center, Texas, under contract which contained the same provisions limiting his authority as were contained in J. M. Oates’ Contract, as quoted in Binding of Bact No. Two, herein, and was acquiesced in by each of them, but that all tile accounts of the Humble Oil & Refining Company with reference to said Station #3129, were kept in the name of R. J. Bridges as agent, and that all inventories of stock and settlements for sales were signed with the name of R. J. Bridges as ‘Service Station Agent,’ some of the same being signed by R. J. Bridges, personally, and some of them being signed with the name of ‘R. J. Bridges, Service Station Agent,’ by cross-plaintiff, who, in such instances, wrote thereunder, ‘By Samford,’ but that no other agent and no officer of Humble Oil & Refining Company knew of such partnership arrangement and partnership operation of said Station.
“8. I find that payment was made to J. M. Oates and to Howard O. Parker for the company’s products sold at Station #3129, by R. J. Bridges and E. Samford, Cross-plaintiff, out of their partnership funds, and that when the cash on hand was insufficient for that purpose, the balance of such payments was made by checks on the partnership account of said Bridges and Samford, some of which were signed ‘Bridges and Samford,’ and some of which were signed by ‘Samford and Bridges’ and which checks were given, sometimes by one, and sometimes the other of the partners.
“9. I find that Humble Oil & Refining Company derived no direct profit from the garage business which Bridges and Samford conducted in connection with this service station, nor from the income they derived from washing ears, greasing cars, and fixing flats, other than the profit from the sale of products, used in grease jobs; but these activities were important, and indirectly profitable to said company, in that they served to attract people to the station, who, while there, would buy oil and gas, and thereby increase the sales, and that, recognizing such fact, J. M. Oates, agent, shared with Samford and Bridges the cost of an advertisement in a local newspaper, dated May 25, 1934, which is here quoted, to-wit:
“ ‘Announcement

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W.2d 743, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samford-v-petroleum-casualty-co-texapp-1935.