Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Rhone

110 S.W.2d 621, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 1937
DocketNo. 3159.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 621 (Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Rhone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Rhone, 110 S.W.2d 621, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

This is a compensation case. Appellee Upshur Rhone is the injured employee. He received a compensable injury while working as a steel worker. It is not questioned that he is entitled to compensation for his injury. The controlling question is whose employee was he at the time he was injured. A correct determination of that question will determine the issue as to which of the two compensation insurance companies involved owe him the money.

The material facts, as we view them, are free from conflict. On October 12, 1935, Rhone was employed as a steel worker in the erection of a steel frame residence in Beaumont, Tex. The house was being erected by Beaumont Development Corporation as the general contractor. The appellant, Traders General Insurance Company, was the compensation insurance carrier for said general contractor. Several subcontractors were engaged on the job, including C. H. McDaniel, who had the subcontract for the erection of the steel frame for the building. The appellee Casualty Underwriters was the compensation carrier for McDaniel. Upshur Rhone had worked for McDaniel as a steel worker for a number of years. Mr. J. P. McCarter was general foreman on the job representing the general contractor. In a general way McCarter had charge of all of the work to see that it was done according to specifications. It was also his duty to co-ordinate the work of the various subcontractors engaged on the building. In other words, if a subcontractor desired some work to be done which was not in line with his own contract, he made his request known, not to the subcontractor who had the particular work in charge, but to McCarter. It also appears without dispute that prior to the injury to Rhone McDaniel made an agreement with McCarter for McCarter to direct his (McDaniel's) employees also. McCarter kept his own time, and he apportioned it between the general contractor and McDaniel in accordance with the number of hours which he put in for each. On the day Upshur Rhone was injured he came to work on the job for McDaniel. During the morning the *Page 622 plumbing contractor notified McCarter that it would be necessary to move the location of one of the steel joists which had already been put in place on the second floor by McDaniel, it being necessary to change the location of the joist in order that the plumbing might be brought into the building. It was shown that the joist in question had been installed by McDaniel in accordance with the approved plans and specifications, and that the only reason it was necessary for it to be moved was to accommodate the plumbing contractor, so that the plumbing "stack" could be erected and brought into the building at a different location from that shown on the drawing according to which McDaniel had performed his work. However, the steel work on the building had not been finished, and McDaniel and his employees, including Rhone, were engaged in work on the steel framework on another part of the building. When notified by the plumbing contractor that it was necessary to have the location of the beam changed, McCarter directed Rhone to change the location of the joist, and Rhone proceeded to climb a ladder to the location of the joist and make the change as directed, the entire operation requiring not exceeding ten minutes. In making the change of the joist Rhone used the same tools that he was engaged in using at the time McCarter directed him to change the joist. As he started down the ladder after changing the location of the joist, he fell, severely injuring his left arm. The jury found, and it is abundantly supported by the evidence, that he has lost permanently the use of the left arm. Notice of the injury was given to both insurance companies, and both refused to acknowledge liability, each contending that Rhone was the employee of the other's employer at the moment of the injury, and this suit followed. The plaintiff sued both insurance companies and alleged that when injured he was in the course of his employment with C. H. McDaniel, but, if mistaken in that allegation, that he was under the control and supervision of the Beaumont Development Corporation and was employed as its servant and employee when injured. He prayed judgment against both defendants, or against whichever one was shown to be liable to him. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues. Certain issues sent to the jury the question of whether Rhone was the employee of McDaniel or the employee of the Beaumont Development Corporation. In response to them the jury found that Rhone was the employee of the Beaumont Development Corporation, and upon the verdict of the jury the trial court entered judgment in favor of Rhone against the Traders General Insurance Company, compensation carrier for the Beaumont Development Corporation, and adjudged that he take nothing against Casualty Underwriters, the compensation carrier for C. H. McDaniel. The Traders General Insurance Company perfected its appeal to this court, and Upshur Rhone perfected a cross-appeal against Casualty Underwriters. The contention of the appellee Casualty Underwriters, in support of the trial court's judgment, is based upon the contention that at the moment of injury Rhone had been loaned by McDaniel to the Beaumont Development Corporation; that, since McDaniel had already installed the joist in question in accordance with the plans, it was not his business to move it, that McCarter, in ordering Rhone to make the change of the joist, acted for the general contractor. Tending to support that view, it was shown that McDaniel and McCarter had had a previous understanding to the effect that McCarter might borrow McDaniel's employees whenever he saw fit to perform the work for the general contractor. It was shown in that connection that a day or two before the injury Upshur Rhone had done about two hours' work cleaning up around the premises under McCarter's direction, for which he was paid by the Beaumont Development Corporation. The appellant, on the other hand, contends that the steel work was McDaniel's work, and, since it appears without dispute that McCarter had the right to direct McDaniel's employees for McDaniel, it conclusively appears that Upshur Rhone had not been loaned to the general contractor but was the employee of McDaniel.

Although McDaniel testified that in his opinion Rhone was employed by the general contractor at the time of the injury, he further testified as follows:

"Q. Was there or not any understanding or agreement if you did any additional work not covered in that contract you would get paid for it?

"A. Well, I had a contract to do a certain amount of work for a certain sum and I certainly would not do any more than that for that sum.

"Q. In other words, if you did additional work, you would expect to make an additional charge for it, is that right? *Page 623

"A. Yes, sir.

"Q. And if you put those steel joists in out there, Mr. McDaniel, according to plans and specifications, and you did put them in I believe you said?

"A. Yes.

"Q. And you had to go in there and change them, after you put them there like you were supposed to, would you or not have made a charge for that additional work?

"A. I would have been entitled to additional compensation.

"Q. Now, this steel joist you learned about Upshur Rhone taking out, was that in your contract?

"Q. Was it in your contract to take out that steel joist that he took out?

"A. No, sir.

"Q. Tell the jury, Mr. McDaniel, did you make any charge to the Beaumont Development Association for his time in taking out that steel joist?

"Q. Turn around there and tell the jury why you didn't make any charge to the Beaumont Development Corporation for that five or ten minutes it took to take out that steel joist?

"A.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W.2d 621, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-general-ins-co-v-rhone-texapp-1937.