Texas Employers' Ins. v. Owen

298 S.W. 542
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 1927
DocketNo. 816-4849
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 542 (Texas Employers' Ins. v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Employers' Ins. v. Owen, 298 S.W. 542 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

SPEER, J.

Writs of error have been granted to both parties herein to review the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Seventh District, wherein it reversed the judgment of the district court and remanded the" cause for another trial. The cause was one instituted by defendant in error, Mrs. Owen, as surviving wife, in her own behalf and on behalf of the children of D. J. Owen, deceased,, to set aside the final decision of the Industrial Accident Board-denying them [543]*543compensation and to recover as beneficiaries against tbe Texas Employers’ Insurance Association for tbe death of D. J. Owen, while engaged as an employee of tbe MeKnight Transfer, Livery & Sales Company, a subscriber and policy bolder in tbe association. Tbe cause was submitted upon special issues in tbe trial court upon tbe answers to which judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs. Upon appeal this judgment was reversed for tbe refusal of tbe trial court to submit certain requested special issuSs. 291 S. W. 940.

We agree with tbe Court of Civil Appeals in its disposition of the association’s assignments, complaining that tbe trial court should have given its summary instruction, and that that court erred in submitting tbe issue whether or not the deceased was an employee of tbe MeKnight Transfer, Livery & Sales Company at tbe time of tbe accident in question. We approve what was said by Associate Justice Jackson upon these questions. The facts of this case certainly do not bring tbe deceased within tbe accepted definition of an “independent contractor.” This definition is admirably stated in Shannon v. Western Indemnity Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 257 S. W. 522:

“A contractor is any person who, in the pursuit of an independent business, undertakes to do a specific piece of work for other persons, using his own means and methods, without submitting himself to their control in respect to all its details. The true test of a contractor would seem to be that he renders service in the course of an independent occupation, representing the will of his employer only as to the result of his work, and not as to the means by which it is accomplished.”

Practically the only indicium of employer and independent contractor is that the deceased owned and furnished the truck for hauling the gravel that he was engaged to deliver. But this circumstance is no more controlling than if he had insisted upon furnishing his own shovel for loading the gravel when he was otherwise employed as a common laborer by the day. There is lacking here the indispensable feature of an “undertaking to do a specific piece of work.” There was not contemplated any completed job. It was a mere service at the will of the parties. There are many features shown by the evidence and stated by the Court of Civil Appeals, wherein the MeKnight Company had and exercised control over the deceased in the prosecution of his work. This. is the test. As early as Cunningham v. International Railroad Co., 51 Tex. 503, 32 Am. Rep. 632, the Supreme Court, quoting from Sherman and Redfield on Negligence, said:

“He is deemed the master who has the supreme" choice, control, and direction of the servant, and whose will the servant represents not merely in the ultimate result of the work, but in all its details.”

This “control” refers to the services to be performed under the contract; that is, it pertains to the precise thing to be done. It, of course, does not relate to those things excluded from the service through the operation of the contract by reservations, limitations, or the like. It relates only' to the service within the contract. There is no reason why one who .undertakes to serve-another may not stipulate for conditions in that service such as the furnishings of tools, the limitation of hours, and the like, thus in a measure controlling the details of the service, without in any "wise becoming an independent contractor. This, for the simple reason he has not undertaken a service in which the employer is interested only in the result of his work and not as to the means by which it is accomplished, which feature enters into all the definitions submitted by the courts.

There being evidence, then, tending to show that the deceased was an employee of the MeKnight Company rather than an independent contractor, and the contract being oral, there was no error in submitting that issue to the jury. Likewise, since the court could not say as a matter of law that the deceased was an independent contractor, the plaintiff in error cannot complain that he submitted that issue also to the jury. We think all assignments of error by Texas Employers’ Insurance Association should be overruled.

The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court, however, for its refusal to submit the defendants’ requested issue No. 5, as follows:

“Did the injury sustained by D. J. Owen, deceased, have to do with and originate in the work, business, trade, or profession of the Me-Knight Transfer, Livery & Sales Company?”

And its special issue No. 6, as follows:

“Did D. J. Owen, deceased, receive the injury which resulted in his death, while he was engaged in or about the furtherance of the affairs or business of MeKnight Transfer, Livery & Sales Company?”

The Court of Civil Appeals was of the opinion, that this amounted to a refusal to submit the defendant’s affirmative defense within the rule laid down in Fox v. Dallas Hotel Co., 111 Tex. 461, 240 S. W. 517. In this we think the court erred. The rule of practice announced in the Fox-Dallas Hotel Co. Case is undoubtedly sound, but the facts of this case do not come within that rule. That was a negligence case in which the trial court submitted a single question covering all contributory negligence issues. The defendant not only objected to this form of submission, but requested in writing that the several contributory negligence issues be separately submitted. Justices Greenwood, speaking for the court, said:

[544]*544“Each group of facts pleaded by defendant in error, which, standing alone, would, if proven, constitute a complete defense to plaintiff in •error’s suit, presented an issue. It was the statutory right of defendant in error to have the issue presented by each complete plea submitted separately to the jury, just as plaintiff in error had the right to have submitted each issue, entitling her to recover, which she pleaded and proved. The court submitted separately, as the statute required, each group of facts relied on by plaintiff in error, under her pleadings and the evidence, to constitute negligence on the part of defendant in error. The court, over the objection of defendant in error, refused to submit separately each group of facts relied on by defendant in error, under its pleadings and the evidence, to constitute contributory negligence on the part of Alexander Pox.
“In submitting either negligence or contributory negligence, special issues should be restricted to specific acts of negligence alleged and proven. It was no less improper, to submit the general question of Pox’s contributory negligence, over objection, without regard to the specific acts of negligence pleaded and supported'by proof, than it would have been to have submitted the general question of defendant in error’s negligence, without regard to the specific acts of negligence set out in plaintiff in error’s petition.”

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-ins-v-owen-texcommnapp-1927.