Skutt v. Dillavou

13 N.W.2d 322, 234 Iowa 610, 155 A.L.R. 327, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 7, 1944
DocketNos. 46444, 46443.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 13 N.W.2d 322 (Skutt v. Dillavou) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skutt v. Dillavou, 13 N.W.2d 322, 234 Iowa 610, 155 A.L.R. 327, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 408 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Smith, C. J

These two eases were consolidated for the purpose of hearing on special appearance. The defendants and issues are the same in each case. The defendant Union Transfer Company, appellant, was served in each ease by filing the original notice with the Iowa Commissioner of Public Safety under the provisions of Code section 5038.04. Notification thereof was personally served on said appellant in Omaha, Nebraska, pursuant to Code section 5038.07. (All citations of Code sections refer to the Iowa Code, 1939.)

Appellant appeared specially in each case and questioned the sufficiency of the service, claiming' it was not a “person” within the meaning of Code section 5038.01 as specially defined in Code section 5038.02. The contention is based upon two propositions: (1) The appellant was not the “owner” of the truck in question, Code section 5038.02(1), and (2) was not “in charge of the vehicle and of the use and operation thereof ’ ’, Code section 5038.02(3). No claim is made of any irregularity or insufficiency in the mechanics of the service under the statutes involved. The trial court overruled the special appearance; the transfer company alone appealed and. we have the one narrow issue to decide.

The record presents no serious dispute of fact. The cases grow out of an automqbile-truck collision which occurred in Greene county September 14, 1941, between an automobile of defendant Ray E. Dillavou, being driven by defendant- Margaret *612 A. Dillavou, and a motor-transport veliicle, consisting of a tractor and trailer, driven by defendant J. E. Eiben and transporting a cargo for appellant, Union Transfer Company. Tn some manner unexplained in this record and unnecessary to this appeal, appellees, who were riding in a third vehicle, were injured.

The tractor was registered in the name of defendant Eiben but was under written lease from him to appellant, a Nebraska corporation with principal place of business at Omaha in that state. The written lease itself does not appear in the record but it appears defendant Eiben was paid on a mileage basis for the use of the tractor and for his services in driving it.

Appellant was engaged in the business of operating a freight line between Omaha, Nebraska, and Belle Plaine, Iowa (a division office), and points east. Eiben made the regular run from Omaha to Belle Plaine, at which point the trailer would be unhooked and taken on east by another tractor while he would hook onto another trailer going west. The transactions had to be covered by an Interstate Commerce Commission permit which was in the name of appellant. Eiben was a resident of Nebraska and had no permit of his own for transporting goods in interstate commerce. Federal Transportation Act, 49 TJ. S. 0., section 1010. The accident occurred on one of his regular trips for appellant.

Appellant deducted social security from the pay earned by Eiben for his services, and carried the property-damage and personal-liability insurance on his tractor. It had tractors and •trailers of its own and paid stated wages to the men who operated them. The particular trailer being drawn by Eiben at the time of the accident, however, belonged to one Emil Fritz.

Appellant’s vice-president testifies:

"The operation of the tractor itself was in the control of Mr. Eiben who owned the tractor. We had a lease on it, which we filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. * * * Mr. Eiben would have the same right as Mr. Fritz, in other words, we had to have his consent to send his tractor anywhere, Chicago or anywhere else and if he did not want [it"] to go to Chicago we could not send it there. The tractor and trailer both in our possession are subject to the owner’s consent at the time this trip was made. *613 Mr. Eiben was working under our direction as to where it should go and what he should do. First of all we told him where the load was going and naturally after he-agreed to take the load into Chicago or wherever he was going he still would be under our direction, but still with his permission. He runs in either direction from Belle Plaine. Belle Plaine is a division point. If the trip originates in Omaha, Belle Plaine would be the end of his trip.”

Again he says:

“The tractor operator purchases his own gasoline and lubricating oil, maintains his own equipment and purchases his own fuel. * * * The Avages are at an agreed rate per mile and at that time of the accident it was per mile.”

This Avas in addition to the mileage paid for the use of the tractor. He testifies further that the only difference in manner of operating a leased tractor- and trailer-unit and one owned by appellant was ‘ ‘ that we have no control over our leased operators insofar as AAdiere they purchase gas, etc., and we couldn’t direct them as to Avhat particular station they could stop at” for that purpose.

The Avords “Enion Freightways ” Avere painted on the tractor. Eiben says:

“Union Transfer painted the sign on my tractor. I paid for it. Union Transfer Company did not tell me to do it. The State of Iovra did.”

He says, “Union FreightAvay is a connecting line,” but appellant’s vice-president testifies that appellant operates and is sometimes referred to as the “Union Freightways” and that the latter is OAvned and operated by appellant.

I. Appellees contend that appellant was, under this record, the “oAvner” of the tractor in question Avithin the meaning and for the purposes of the statutory provisions involved. They cite cases AA'hich hold that as used in the mechanic’s-lien law, the redemption laws, and Ihe slatute concerning trespass by animals upon adjoining land the (nvners of which do not maintain laAvful partition fences, the term has meanmg broader than absolute and unqualified title.

*614 It is probable, however, that the word as used in section 5038.02 (1) is controlled by the definition in Code section 50,0,0.01 (33), which is found in the same chapter of the Code and is expressly made applicable “for the purposes of this chapter.”

In the view we take of the case we need make no pronouncement, and, in fact, make none, upon the question of ownership. The vehicle was leased to appellant and was being used and operated for its benefit and in the conduct of its business under its Interstate Commerce Commission permit, which constituted the only legal authority for such use and operation.

II. Under these circumstances the justification for the substituted service upon appellant must be sought in Code section 5038.02 (3), which reads as follows:

“3. Any person who is in charge of the vehicle and of the use and operation thereof with the express or implied consent of the owner.”

Code section 5000.01 (32) defines the word “person” as “every natural person, firm, copartnership, association, or corporation. ’1

When we apply this definition to Code section 5038.02 (3) we must conclude that the legislature contemplated that a corporation

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.W.2d 322, 234 Iowa 610, 155 A.L.R. 327, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skutt-v-dillavou-iowa-1944.