Snodgrass v. Cleveland Co-Operative Coal Co.

167 N.E. 493, 31 Ohio App. 470, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 553
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 493 (Snodgrass v. Cleveland Co-Operative Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snodgrass v. Cleveland Co-Operative Coal Co., 167 N.E. 493, 31 Ohio App. 470, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 553 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Levine, J.

The parties appear in this court in the same order in which they appeared in the trial court. The plaintiff is the administratrix of the estate of Robert Snodgrass, deceased, and brought this action against the defendant company, and one *472 Lorenzo Adams, to recover damages for wrongful death caused by the negligence of the defendants. It is alleged in the petition in substance that Lorenzo Adams was an employee of the codefendant company ; that he was engaged in behalf of his employer, the Cleveland Co-operative Coal Company, in the. task of delivering coal; that at the time of the accident he was on his way to the company’s plant to get another load of coal. While so on his way, it is asserted in behalf of plaintiff, a collision occurred between the truck driven by Lorenzo Adams and a motorcycle which the deceased was then riding; that Lorenzo Adams, without giving any warning, at an unreasonable rate of speed, had suddenly turned into a street known as Congress Court, directly in the path of the motorcycle; that in said collision the decedent, Robert' Snodgrass, who was riding the motorcycle, came in contact with some part of the truck, and was instantly killed.

After the plaintiff introduced evidence and rested, the trial court sustained a motion of defendant for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant, and entered judgment accordingly. The ground upon which the trial court directed a verdict for the coal company was that it appears from the evidence, as a matter of law, that Lorenzo Adams was not an employee of the coal company, but was, instead, an independent contractor. Thereupon the plaintiff dismissed the case as against Lorenzo Adams and entered an exception to the ruling of the court. We must look, of course, to the record, and, after giving the evidence introduced in behalf of plaintiff the most favorable construction, determine from that whether the operative facts so appearing upon the *473 record establish the relation of independent contractor between Lorenzo Adams and the Cleveland Cooperative Coal Company. .

It appears that the Cleveland Co-operative Coal Company was engaged in the business of delivering coal, and had several yards, and that the one at which Lorenzo Adams worked was in the vicinity of Bast Eighty-Ninth street and Woodland avenue. The company owned no trucks; but engaged men who owned their trucks, and these men delivered the coal at so much per ton. Lorenzo Adams owned his own truck. There was no written contract of employment, but merely a verbal understanding. Quoting from the testimony of Lorenzo Adams: ‘ ‘ Shanks (meaning the President and Superintendent of the Company) told me that he had some coal to haul and could I haul it? I was first employed by the— can’t remember it now — well, anyway, told me he had some coal to haul and give me the figures and prices. After he give me the price I told him, ‘yes, I would haul it for him.’ ” According to the verbal understanding Adams was to get 75 cents per ton for hauling, and the company took 3 cents out of every dollar he earned for insurance. Shanks told him this would be done when he employed him. This was some time in July, 1925, and Mr. Shanks told him to report to the foreman at the yard, which he did. The evidence shows that Adams hauled coal to the Engineers’ Building, and also to domestic users, and other places, whenever and wherever directed by the foreman of the yard.

The record shows that other persons owning their own trucks at times carried coal to the Engineers’ Building. This last item of evidence must be con *474 sidered, because of tbe defendant’s claim that Adams had an independent contract to carry coal to the Engineers’ Building. Giving the evidence the most favorable construction, as the court is bound to do when a motion to direct is offered, it unquestionably lends itself to the inference that Lorenzo Adams carried coaTnot only to the Engineers’ Building. but to other places, when so direct£¿_nnd_£hát other men owning their own trucks carried coal to the Engineers’ Building, when so told.

On the question as to what control the coal company exercised over Lorenzo Adams the record discloses that Lorenzo Adams testified that just before the accident happened he was returning to the coal yard to get another load of coal to take down to the Engineers’ Building; that the foreman, Mr. Denny, had ordered him to take coal down to the Engineers’ Building; that Mr. Denny was the foreman in charge of the men at the yard. Quoting from the testimony of Lorenzo Adams:

“Q. You took orders from Mr. Denny? A. I did.
“Q. And did what he told you to do? A. I did.
“Q. It’s true, isn’t it, that that day, on the 4th of December, a carload of coal of the kind used by the Engineers’ Building, had come in about two o’clock in the afternoon? A. Yes. * * *
“Q. You reported at the orders of Mr. Denny every morning did you not? A. I did.”

On the day of the accident, which was December 4, 1925, Mr. Denny ordered Adams to take the coal down to the Engineers’ Building, as a carload had just come in, and that he would have to work late that day; that he wanted to get at least four loads down that day; that Denny said that all the coal *475 would have to be unloaded before 2 p. m. the next afternoon; that Denny told Adams to hurry up. After the accident happened, Lorenzo Adams stated that he reported it to Mr. Denny; that Denny told him to make up a report of the accident, which he did; that he was required to make out reports of all accidents that happened.

A question was addressed to Lorenzo Adams as to whether there were other men hauling coal to the Engineers’ Building, when so directed. The court sustained an objection to the question. There was read into the record that the witness would have testified in the affirmative if permitted to answer. The following question was asked Adams: “Q. Did Mr. Denny have a right to discharge you?”

The court sustained the objection to the question, and an exception was taken. There was read into the record that had Adams been permitted to answer he would have stated that Denny did have a right to discharge him.

The witness Adams stated that 3 cents out of every dollar was taken by the coal company out of his pay for insurance. The record shows that he worked for the coal company practically all the time from July, 1925, until this accident happened in December, 1925; that he reported every morning at 7 o’clock as did every other man; that he drove his own truck in hauling coal for the company, and had a sign of the Cleveland Co-Operative Coal Company on his truck, which he was ordered to put on by Denny; that the company carried him on its pay roll, and the pay was made up at the office; that the foreman-made up the slips, sent them to the office to the bookkeeper, who made up the pay roll; and that *476 Adams and the rest of the men were paid once a week. The foreman, Bryan Denny, was called as a witness, and he testified as to the conditions under which Adáms worked. lie stated that he came to the yard as foreman a short time after Adams was engaged to work by the president of the company. He stated that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 493, 31 Ohio App. 470, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snodgrass-v-cleveland-co-operative-coal-co-ohioctapp-1929.