Thompson v. National Surety Corporation
This text of 124 So. 2d 227 (Thompson v. National Surety Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Carrie Plant THOMPSON et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
NATIONAL SURETY CORPORATION et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*228 Wellborn Jack and Joseph G. Hebert, Shreveport, for appellants.
Lunn, Irion, Switzer, Trichel & Johnson, Shreveport, for appellees.
AYRES, Judge.
Plaintiffs, husband and wife, appeal from a judgment approving a jury verdict rejecting their demands for damages against the defendants, T. L. James & Co., Inc., and its public liability insurer, National Surety Corporation.
The question presented by this appeal relates primarily to one of liability, vel non, of the appellees for the negligent acts of one Henry Summage. More accurately stated, the question is whether such a relationship existed between T. L. James & Co., Inc., sometimes hereinafter referred to as James, and Summage as would, under the doctrine of respondeat superior, as expressed in LSA-C.C. Art. 2320, make it answerable for the negligence of Summage.
Plaintiffs contend (1) that T. L. James & Co., Inc., was the employer of not only Summage but of Felix G. Porta, Jr., and R. J. Flowers; (2) that Summage was, at least, a borrowed employee of James; and (3), in the alternative, that James is liable in contract for the damages allegedly sustained by plaintiffs.
Defendants contend that the relationship between Porta and James was one of vendor and vendee, and that Porta was the employer of both Flowers and Summage. Defendants further deny any liability, by virtue of James' contract with the Department of Highways of the State of Louisiana, for the performance of which it was engaged at the time plaintiffs allegedly sustained accidental injuries and damages.
Also made defendants were Flowers, Porta, and the latter's surety, National Union Indemnity Company, as well as Summage. Plaintiffs' demands were rejected as to Summage, as well as to these appellees, but sustained as to Flowers, Porta, and the latter's surety. The record reflects that, as to this judgment, a settlement was effected by plaintiffs with reservation of their rights against these appellees. No contest is presented as to the negligence of Henry Summage.
Plaintiff, Mrs. Thompson, in the family automobile, at about 7:40 a. m. October 6, 1958, was proceeding in a westerly direction on Pierremont Road in the City of Shreveport, when, on stopping in obedience to a red signal light at the intersection of Southern Avenue, her car was struck a severe blow from the rear by a Chevrolet dump truck loaded with dirt, driven by Summage. Summage was en route to deliver the load of dirt to the project then under construction by James.
The issues, being factual in nature, require a brief statement of the facts as established and disclosed by the record. T. L. James & Co., Inc., contracted with the Department of Highways to furnish all materials, equipment, and labor; and to build, construct, and complete a project on U. S. Highway 171, entitled Shreveport-Summer Grove Highway, consisting of 3.615 miles of concrete pavement, which project was known locally as Hearne Avenue Extension.
According to the plans and specifications, the work contracted included the installation of culverts and other drainage structures and the backfilling of the excavations made therefor. The principal excavation *229 to be backfilled consisted of a ditch of varying dimensions but from eight to ten feet deep, twelve to twenty feet wide, and three thousand feet in length. For the backfilling of this ditch, as well as for other appropriate purposes, James contracted with Porta for such dirt as needed for a price of $5 per load of five cubic yards, delivered.
Porta was engaged in the business of selling and delivering dirt from a location or pit in the Dixie Garden area of the City of Shreveport. He began this business in September, 1957, several months prior to his agreement with James. His customers included several contractors as well as the public generally. Prices varied dependent upon the distance for delivery and upon the quantity sold. The price, generally, for an individual load was $6 but, to contractors who ordered large quantities, $5 per load. For the operation of this location, or pit, Porta employed Flowers to operate the pit and load the trucks by means of a dragline and to make delivery of the dirt as ordered. Porta paid Flowers, for his services, $3.50 per load. Flowers employed Summage to drive Flowers' truck and paid him $1 per load for making the delivery. Similar arrangements were made by Flowers with other drivers. Porta paid the landowner for the dirt at the rate of forty cents per load. A record of the deliveries was made and retained by means of tickets, copies of which were furnished all parties concerned. A copy, with a receipt attached, was the basis of the billing, or invoice, by Porta to James for the amount of dirt delivered. The invoices included the State Sales Tax.
At the time of the aforesaid accident, Flowers was employed in the manner stated by Porta, and Summage was in Flowers' employ as a truck driver in the delivery of dirt to James.
The testimony is most convincing that the contract between Porta and James constituted a sale of dirt, and that the relationship between these parties was that of vendor and vendee. William S. Swindle, superintendent and project manager for James, testified that, acting for his employer, he purchased dirt for the aforesaid project from Porta at a price of $5 per load of five cubic yards delivered on the job. Identical was Porta's testimony. No right of control of Porta's or Flowers' trucks or employees was conferred by their agreement upon James and no control was exercised unless it could be said that the giving of information, or the signaling by the waving of the hand to the truck drivers where to dump, or deliver the dirt, on their arrival on the job, constituted control.
An agreement by which one gives a thing for a price in current money and the other gives the price in order to have the thing, itself, constitutes a contract of sale, and three circumstances concur in the perfection of the contract, namely: the thing sold, the price, and the consent. LSA-C.C. Art. 2439. These circumstances concur in the agreement between Porta and James and constitute a sale of the dirt, particularly in view of its actual delivery in accordance with the agreement.
A comparable, factual situation was presented in Smith v. Crossett Lumber Co., La.App.1954, 72 So.2d 895, wherein it was held that, where a producer of logs and pulpwood secured his own timber, hired his own employees, produced pulpwood, transported it to a railroad, and sold it to a third person who billed and shipped it to the lumber company, the relationship between the producer, on the one hand, and the third person and lumber company, on the other, was that of seller and buyers and not that of employee and employers.
Analogous to the factual situation in the instant case, were the facts presented in Taylor v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co., 220 La. 995, 58 So.2d 206. There it was held that, where deceased, using his own equipment, delivered logs to sawmill under agreement whereby deceased was not required to deliver any definite quantity or quality of logs, and no definite time was *230
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124 So. 2d 227, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 1145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-national-surety-corporation-lactapp-1960.