Sharbino v. Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Co.

181 So. 20
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1938
DocketNo. 5629.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 181 So. 20 (Sharbino v. Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharbino v. Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Co., 181 So. 20 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

While driving a large truck, which belonged to his employer, plaintiff met with an accident on the night of Sunday, August 9, 1936, resulting in serious injury to himself. Th.e employer, who was one Neeley' Roberts, was engaged at the time in the carrying out of a contract that Ke had with the Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Incorporated, to cut and haul timber.

In this suit, instituted pursuant to the provisions of the Louisiana Employers’ Liability Act, Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended, plaintiff asks for a solidary judgment awarding him compensation as for total and permanent disability, and for medical expenses, against said Neeley Roberts, the Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Incorporated, and the latter’s compensation insurer, Consolidated Underwriters.

After a trial of the merits of the case, there was judgment in plaintiff’s ’ favor granting the requested benefits. All defendants appealed.

In this court, no issue is made regarding the amount of wages earned by plaintiff at the time of the accident or the extent of the injuries sustained by him.

As disclosed by brief of appellants’ counsel, the only defenses urged are (1) that plaintiff was not engaged in his employer’s business at the time of the accident, but was merely pursuing his own business or pleasure, and (2) in the alternative, at the time of the accident plaintiff was in such a state of complete intoxication that he was incapable of operating the truck, and that his intoxication caused the» accident.

Defendant Roberts had a contract with the Colfax Lumber & Creosoting Company, Incorporated, for the cutting and hauling of timber for it, as above stated, and he employed others for the purpose of assisting him in its performance. Plaintiff was in *21 his employ and was charged with the duty of driving one of the trucks in the hauling of poles, after they were cut and bunched, from various localities to the plant of the company, or, if otherwise directed, to the railroad loading points. Both plaintiff and his employer resided near the town of Montgomery, La. The truck in question was intrusted to and placed in the care and custody of plaintiff, and was kept at night at his home when he was hauling near there. When operating' elsewhere, it was parked at the rooming house where he spent the night.

In the early morning of the Thursday immediately preceding the date of the accident, plaintiff was sent to a tract of land near Goldonna, La., on which logging operations were being conducted, for the purpose of hauling poles. His instructions, according to the testimony of defendant Roberts and the latter’s son, were to remain there until he had hauled all of the poles which had been cut, and until he received orders to go elsewhere. Plaintiff and two other witnesses testify, however, that he was instructed to go to Montgomery on Saturday, if he had finished hauling by that time, and, if not, to go there Sunday.

Plaintiff worked all of Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, conveying poles from the woods to Goldonna, a distance of about seven miles. Plis final load reached its destination Saturday after sundown, and it is testified to by plaintiff and his witnesses that this completed the transporting of all poles which had been bunched and were to be hauled. The testimony of Mr. Roberts and one of his other employees, Earl Fredieu, is to the effect that all of the poles were not so hauled; and that the latter carried three loads from the woods about four weeks after the accident in question.

It may be here observed that the trial judge resolved the conflicts in the evidence, described in the two preceding paragraphs,, in plaintiff’s favor, as is disclosed by his well-considered, written opinion which we find in the record. With reference to the transporting of the poles, he states: “The evidence convinces our mind that the plaintiff had hauled and stacked at the railroad all the poles that were cut and stacked before he left for his home. Some thirty days later a truck driver reported that he hauled poles that had been stacked in the vicinity of Goldonna in the same place that, plaintiff was supposed to have hauled. This is explained by witnesses for the plaintiff that after the plaintiff completed the job, the McNaughtons cut poles and stacked some in the woods, and when the plaintiff left all the poles that were cut and stacked were hauled by him to the railroad station. This was very firmly testified to by the two McNaughtons.”

As to the instructions given to plaintiff, his opinion recites: “We also are satisfied that plaintiff had instructions from his employer to return to his home near Montgomery after he had completed the job, that he had been sent to perform.”

We cannot say that the trial judge manifestly erred in his findings regarding the two above-mentioned, disputed facts. The witnesses were seen and beard by him, which privilege was not ours, and because of this, we are constrained to and do adopt his findings.

The employee spent Saturday night and Sunday morning at his rooming house at or near Goldonna. About 1 o’clock in the afternoon of the last-mentioned day, he proceeded with his truck to the town of Chestnut, La., a distance of approximately eight miles, for the purpose of canceling a date which he had previously contracted with a young lady. After being in her company for a short period of time, he set out on the journey to his home, as directed by the employer. He1 arrived in Montgomery late that evening and went to several establishments situated there looking for Mr. Neeley. At one of the places he was informed that his employer was seeking him. While in that town he drank several bottles of beer, and also caused a changing of the oil in his truck.

Shortly after 8 o’clock on that Sunday evening, he drove his truck from Montgomery with the view and purpose of going to his home which was a few miles away. He had traveled about two miles when he met an approaching automobile on a curve. The lights of the car blinded him and this resulted in the wrecking of his truck and the above-mentioned, sustained injuries.

Under the facts which we have found and recited hereinabove, it is our opinion that plaintiff was engaged in his employer’s business at the time of the accident, and was not on a mission personal to himself.

It was said by the Louisiana Supreme Court in the comparatively recent case of Kern v. Southport Mill, 174 La. 432, 141 So. 19, 20, that:

*22 “Services ‘arise out of’ and are ‘incidental to’ an employment, whenever the employment calls for just such services. And whenever the employer calls upon the employee to render any particular service, he, at least (that is to say, the employer himself), is in no position any longer to deny that the services thus requested arise out of and are incidental to the employment. Otherwise, by what right has the employee been called upon to perform them?

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Related

O'NEAL v. Home Ins. Co.
404 So. 2d 1355 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1981)
Ray v. Superior Iron Works and Supply Co., Inc.
284 So. 2d 140 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Edwards v. Shreveport Creosoting Co.
21 So. 2d 878 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharbino-v-colfax-lumber-creosoting-co-lactapp-1938.