Shuck v. Hendershot

347 P.2d 362, 185 Kan. 673, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 12, 1959
Docket41,521
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 347 P.2d 362 (Shuck v. Hendershot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shuck v. Hendershot, 347 P.2d 362, 185 Kan. 673, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 464 (kan 1959).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This is a common-law action for damages for personal injury based on alleged negligence of defendants.

The joint demurrer of defendants Hendershot and Singleton, and the separate demurrer of defendant Smith, to the amended petition (hereafter referred to as petition), were overruled. The appeal is from those rulings.

The basic question involved is whether the petition shows on its face that plaintiff’s recovery is confined to the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act.

Despite our reluctance to encumber an opinion with lengthy quotation of pleadings, it is felt that in order fully to present the various questions and to show the basis of our decision it will be necessary to do so in this case. Material portions of the petition are therefore set out in full:

"Plaintiff, Rex Shuck, for his amended petition against the above named defendants, and for the purpose of complying with and conforming to the mlings of the above captioned Court in striking certain portions of the original petition filed herein, states and alleges as follows:
“1. Plaintiff, whose present post office address is Burdett, Kansas, is a resident of Pawnee County, Kansas;
“2. Defendants, Dale Hendershot and Joseph Singleton, are general partners, and engaged in such capacity in doing business as general construction contractors;
*675 “3. That the defendant, Dale Hendershot, is a resident of Pawnee County, Kansas, and his present post office address is Burdett, Kansas;
“4. That the defendant, Joseph Singleton, is a resident of Pawnee County, Kansas, and his present post office address is Burdett, Kansas;
“5. That the defendant, Donald Smith, is a resident of Pawnee County, Kansas, and his present post office address is Burdett, Kansas;
“6. On or about the 31st day of July, 1957, plaintiff was employed by the defendant, Donald Smith, as a common laborer, and as directed by such employer, plaintiff commenced to work at his employer’s farm situated south of Burdett, in Pawnee County, Kansas;
“7. At the date last above shown and at all other times mentioned herein, the defendant, Donald Smith, was regularly engaged in the business of farming and raising livestock, and devoted a substantial portion of his time and labor to no other business or trade;
“8. Defendant, Donald Smith, was not at any time mentioned within this petition, engaged in the business or trade of constructing or repairing buildings, and the construction of a single machinery shed on such farm, as hereinafter alleged, was merely incidental to Donald Smith’s regular business of farming and raising livestock.
“9. At the time plaintiff accepted such employment and commenced to work for such employer, the defendants, Hendershot and Singleton, were engaged by Donald Smith as independent construction contractors in constructing and erecting a roundtop farm storage and machinery shed owned by and on premises owned and operated by Donald Smith at such farm.
“10. Acts of Dale Hendershot, as hereinafter alleged, were those performed and committed as the active partner of the general partnership composed of Hendershot and Singleton;
“11. On or about July 31, 1957, plaintiff was instructed by his employer, Donald Smith, to devote his labor to the construction of such roundtop shed under the supervision of Dale Hendershot, and to perform such work as Hendershot should assign to plaintiff as a common laborer.
“12. On or about July 31, 1957, plaintiff commenced to provide his labor to the construction of such roundtop machinery shed and was assigned work to perform by the said Dale Hendershot;
“13. Hendershot and Singleton, such partnership, had employed and were employing several persons on the date last above shown, including Gary Hendershot, a minor son of Dale Hendershot and Maurice Daughenbaugh, who were engaged in such machinery shed construction work;
“14. The partnership, Hendershot and Singleton, through Dale Hendershot, one of such general partners, was in complete charge of and assumed and exercised exclusive control over such construction, having been retained by Donald Smith for that purpose;
“15. Plaintiff was paid by the defendant, Donald Smith, on an hourly wage basis of $1.25 per hour, and received no other compensation for his labor in the construction of such machinery shed;
“16. That sometime between July 31, 1957, and August 8, 1957, the defendant, Dale Hendershot, with the assistance of the common labor of Maurice Daughenbaugh, employee of such partnership, constructed a building scaffold on the premises where such machinery shed was being erected; that Dale *676 Hendershot performed most of the work in its construction and erection and the attachment of such scaffold to the machinery shed, and in addition, exclusively: (a) selected all lumber therefore from a pile of used lumber salvaged from a frame building shed owned by Donald Smith which had been demolished by a tornado, and which materials had been furnished by the defendant, Donald Smith, for use in and in connection with the construction of such machinery shed; (b) planned and designed the construction of such scaffold; (c) supervised the work of its construction and every detail thereof; (d) selected and furnished all other materials therefor, and (3) furnished such scaffold in a finished state to plaintiff for plaintiff’s use in performing work assigned to him by the defendant, Dale Hendershot;
“17. On August 8, 1957, such scaffold while attached and fastened to the entire front or south end of such machinery shed, was mounted by plaintiff in the performance of work assigned to him by the defendant, Dale Hendershot, at Hendershot’s direction, and in the course of his employment by the defendant, Donald Smith; in the early afternoon of that day as last above shown, plaintiff and the defendant, Dale Hendershot, were standing on two secured planks constituting the platform of such scaffold just above the top of the entrance to such machinery shed and approximately fourteen (14) feet above the ground level; plaintiff was standing approximately five (5) or six (6) feet east of the defendant, Dale Hendershot; the defendant, Dale Hendershot had just dismounted from a saw-horse resting on top of the scaffolding platform where he had been engaged in nailing siding on the machinery shed; at that time and place, plaintiff looked below and to his left or west, and saw a ‘scab’ split lengthwise; such ‘scab’ consisted of a 2" x 6" or a 2," x 8" block of wood, approximately one foot in length, one of approximately four or.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
347 P.2d 362, 185 Kan. 673, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shuck-v-hendershot-kan-1959.