Texas Pipe Line Co. of Oklahoma v. Willis

1935 OK 518, 45 P.2d 138, 172 Okla. 148, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 7, 1935
DocketNo. 25408.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1935 OK 518 (Texas Pipe Line Co. of Oklahoma v. Willis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Pipe Line Co. of Oklahoma v. Willis, 1935 OK 518, 45 P.2d 138, 172 Okla. 148, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 393 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

The plaintiff (defendant in error) was walking along a road and was struck and seriously injured by a truck being driven by Cecil Decker in transporting iron pipe which was being removed from, a nearby pipe line. I-Ie sued the Texas Pipe Line Company of Oklahoma, a corporation, alleging that Decker was its servant and acting within the scope of his employment at the time and place of the injury. He recovered a verdict and judgment against defendant, which defendant is now here on appeal, urging two propositions for reversal: That plaintiff’s evidence was insufficient to establish the relationship of master and servant, and that defendant’s undisputed evidence established that the driver was the servant of an independent contractor, and lienee the defendant was not liable. Defendant contends that it was error for the trial court to overrule its demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence and that the trial court was further in error in refusing defendant’s requested instruction for a directed verdict in its favor.

Such being the theory of appeal, we consider the evidence under the construction thereof which is most favorable to plaintiff. The burden of proving the relationship of master and servant was upon the plaintiff. The extent of plaintiff’s proof in this connection was that the pipe-line right of way, or easement for the use of the land under which the pipe line was laid, was owned by the defendant; that the pipe line was being removed and hauled away for shipment or use elsewhere, some of it in Texas and a part of it for delivery to another point in Oklahoma for use by defendant. Though the record is uncertain on the point, we may assume that the pipe on the truck which struck plaintiff belonged to defendant. We may also presume, as could the jury, that the said pipe was being transported for the benefit of the defendant and with its consent. The plaintiff offered no other evidence concerning the relationship of the truck driver with the defendant corporation. It is unnecessary for us to determine whether the foregoing constitutes a prima facie case of agency, on account of the fact that defendant’s second proposition is conclusive on the issues of this appeal.

*149 The undisputed evidence of the defendant was to the effect that the Tesas Pipe Line Company of Oklahoma, defendant, and the Tosas Pipe Line Company of Texas are separate corporations (though that fact does not matter here) and that the Texas Pipe Line Company of Texas contracted with Holder & Menefee, independent pipe - line contractors, to remove and transport pipe from certain sections of pipe line in the state of Texas and also in Oklahoma, and the pipe line in question here was included in said contract.- The truck driver, Decker, was employed, paid, directed, and entirely controlled by Holder & Menefee, the independent contractors. It does not appear that any representative or employee of either the Texas Pipe Line Company of Oklahoma or the Texas Pipe Line Company of Texas was in, near, about, or engaged in the work of removing and transporting the pipe in question. Holder & Menefee used their own equipment, and paid their own employees, and neither the Oklahoma corporation nor the Texas corporation had any hand in or connection with the work of removing and transporting the pipe, other than the execution of the contract made between the Texas Pipe Line Company of Texas and Holder & Menefee. The consideration received by Holder & Menefee for removing and' transporting- the pipe was so much per foot thereof, delivered at destination. The contract was in writing and was introduced in evidence. One paragraph thereof was to the following effect:

“It is stipulated and agreed that the contractor is an independent contractor and has full power and authority to select the means, methods, and manner of performing the work herein contracted for, and is responsible to the company only for the results herein contracted for, and that the company shall not have the power or authority to direct, supervise, or control the contractor in the means, manner, or method of the performance of the work, but that said contractor shall be responsible to the company for the faithful completion of the work herein contracted for, and in accordance with the specifications and plans hereto attached and referred to.”

The foregoing provision of the contract would not in itself establish the status of independent contractor if the practice under said contract should vary with its terms; in other words, merely because parties execute a contract which on its face would create the relationship of independent contractor, that relationship is not thereby created, as to injured third parties, unless the practice under said contract conforms to that relationship. A master may not escape liability for the negligent acts of his servant by an agreement with the servant that the servant is an independent contractor, if in practice under that contract the tests as to who! is an independent contractor are not satisfied. But in the instant case those tests are satisfied and the defendant took it upon itself to establish by evidence which was undisputed that the contract was entered into and performed in good faith. Mr. Holder, of the firm of Holder & Menefee, and also the driver of the truck, and an officer of the Texas Company, testified to facts thoroughly establishing that Holder & Menefee, as independent contractors, had and used full power and authority to select the means, methods, and manner of performing the work, that they were responsible to the company only for the results, and that the defendant did not have or seek to exercise the power or authority to direct or control Holder & Menefee in the means, manner, or method of performance of the work. The facts further indicated that the said contractors were responsible to the defendant only for the faithful performance of the work contracted to be done. It does not appear from the record that any representative of - either the Oklahoma corporation or the Texas corporation was present at or had any connection whatever with the work being done, except in the execution of said contract in the beginning.

This case meets all of the tests we have repeatedly laid down for the determination of whether one is a servant or an independent contractor, and under the state of the evidence the trial court should have ruled as a matter of law that the driver of the truck was the servant of Holder & Mene-fee, and that the latter were independent contractors, since the evidence on that issue was neither inherently improbable nor contradicted. The. facts here are almost identical with those in Producers’ Lumber Co. v. Butler, 87 Okla. 172, 209 P. 738, on -the question of the relationship, and in that case we held that the driver was not the servant of the defendant but of the independent contractor who had contracted with the defendant. In that case we said:

“An ‘independent contractor’ is one who, exercising- an independent employment, contracts to do a piece of work according to his own methods and without being subject to the control of his employer except as to the result of the work”

—and in Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Beasley, 67 Okla. 27, 168 P. 200, we held that where a contract is in writing, or the terms there *150

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 518, 45 P.2d 138, 172 Okla. 148, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pipe-line-co-of-oklahoma-v-willis-okla-1935.