Towers v. Watson Bros. Transportation Co.

294 N.W. 594, 229 Iowa 387
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 12, 1940
DocketNo. 45200.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 294 N.W. 594 (Towers v. Watson Bros. Transportation Co.) 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
Towers v. Watson Bros. Transportation Co., 294 N.W. 594, 229 Iowa 387 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

Glenn D. Towers filed an application for arbitration in the office of the Iowa industrial commissioner in which he alleged that he received an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment at Iowa City, Iowa, on the 17th day of December, 1937, resulting in certain specified disabilities.

He alleged that the defendant Watson Brothers Transportation Company, Inc., is a foreign corporation licensed to do business in the state of Iowa and engaged in the transportation of freight for hire. That the defendant Employers Mutual Casualty Company carried the workmen’s compensation insurance. That he was employed by Watson Brothers together with his helper, Le Boy O. Pieart, “to operate a truck under said employers interstate permit and under its state permit in the states of Iowa and Illinois and while so in their employ was to transport a cargo for said employer under its permit to Chicago and to transport a cargo from Chicago to Des Moines.’-’ He alleged that while en route back from Chicago to Des Moines in ac: eordance with his employment, the truck, on account, of the icy condition of the road, slid off the road, and as a result he received personal injuries resulting in disability. •

Defendants filed a general denial and in addition alleged that, at the time of said accident, claimant was engaged.in interstate commerce, and that the Iowa workmen’s compensation act would not be applicable. The defendants’ answer' also alleged that Towers was an independent contractor and that he was not an employee of the defendant Watson Brothers within the meaning of the Iowa compensation, act. The case was first tried as an arbitration action before the deputy industrial commissioner, sitting as the sole arbitrator, and, on the 14th day of May, 1938, he rendered a decision ¿warding compensation to claimant. The case was reviewed before the industrial commissioner, who rendered a decision affirming the deputy commissioner’s award. The defendants appealed to the district court of Johnson county, and the Honorable H. D. Evans, one of the judges of said court, affirmed the findings of, facts and *389 award of the industrial commissioner and rendered judgment accordingly. The defendants have appealed to this court.

This is a workmen’s compensation ease and this court has. rightly said on many occasions that the workmen’s compensation act is to have a broad and liberal construction in aid of accomplishing the object of the enactment. With this thought in mind we turn to the record in this case.

In a very lengthy and able argument, appellants urged upon us the contention that, because claimant was engaged in interstate commerce, the act does not apply. The evidence shows that Towers was hired in Iowa, and his contract of employment was. an Iowa contract. He was told that Watson Brothers had insurance that would fully cover him. He was injured within the border of this state.

This court in the case of Pierce v. Bekins Van & Storage Co., 185 Iowa 1346, on page 1354, 172 N. W. 191, on page 193, said:

‘ ‘ In other words, it can be conceded that, as a law, the compensation statute is not to be effective in other states.. But such concession will not méet the position that, even if the statute is not law in another state, yet, with the statute read into the contract, there is an enforcible contract to be paid according to the statute, though the injury be suffered outside of the state. And it will be found that, in cases wherein it is affirmed that there can be no recovery because the statute has no extra-territorial effect, the distinction was overlooked that a statute which is a law only within the state* may be so read into a contract of hiring, as that compensation according to the terms of the statute maybe recovered though the injury was sustained in a jurisdiction in which said statute was not effective as a law. ’ ’

In the Pierce case the employee was hired by a moving van company located in Sioux City, and, when he was injured, he was in the process of hauling a load of furniture from Nebraska back to Iowa.

In the case of Cullamore v. Groneweg & Schoentgen Co.; 219 Iowa 200, 202, 257 N. W. 561, 562, speaking through Justice Stevens, this court said:

‘ ‘ Compensation laws of comparatively recent application in *390 this state were enacted to accomplish certain and definite purposes. They comprehend an enlarged and better relationship— a relationship out of which each of the respective parties obtain more or less mutual and reciprocal benefits. The legislature has not seen fit to limit the scope and effect of our compensation statutes within state boundaries. It could do this or it could give them wider application. The latter could be made so by contract. The deceased employee carried on his employment in Nebraska, making the necessary reports and visits to his employer for the benefit and profit of the employer’s business. The question is not whether a decision one way or the other will be more convenient or profitable to the employee. The statutes must be interpreted and construed according to their purpose, meaning, and intent. It is significant that the legislature has seen fit to provide that ‘If the injury occurred outside this state the hearings of the board shall be held in the county seat of this state which is nearest to the place where the injury occurred. * * * ’ Section 1440, Code of 1931. The act itself, therefore, recognizes that compensation is to be available to an employee notwithstanding the injuries are received in some other jurisdiction. There is no question but what the injuries in the present instance arose out of and in the course of the employment. We are not dealing with actions arising ex delicto, but with a controversy in its nature contractual.”

The contract on the part of the employer to pay compensation to the employee, and the contract on the part of the employee to accept such benefits, is made'by the statute itself.

Glenn Towers entered into a contract of employment with Watson Brothers, in the state of Iowa, and regardless of the fact that in the performance of the duties required he was compelled to go outside of the state of Iowa, when he became an employee of Watson Brothers the statutes of this state created a contract on the part of the employer to pay him for any injury which he received in the course of his employment, whether that injury was received outside or inside the state of Iowa.

It is next contended that at the time of the accident Towers was not an employee of the Watson Brothers Company, within the meaning of the workmen’s compensation act *391 of Iowa. That the relationship of Glenn D. Towers to the said transportation company was that of an independent contractor.

So we are confronted with the difficult question of whether Towers was an independent contractor, or the relationship of master and servant prevailed. The late Justice Evans expressed the views of the writer of this opinion on this troublesome question, in the case of Burns v. Eno, 213 Iowa 881, at page 884, 240 N. W. 209, at page 210, when very pertinently and aptly he said:

“The question raised is one which lends itself to endless debate and rather plausible argument on either side.

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Bluebook (online)
294 N.W. 594, 229 Iowa 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towers-v-watson-bros-transportation-co-iowa-1940.