Vaseleou v. St. Louis Realty & Securities Co.

130 S.W.2d 538, 344 Mo. 1121, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 448
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 7, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 538 (Vaseleou v. St. Louis Realty & Securities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaseleou v. St. Louis Realty & Securities Co., 130 S.W.2d 538, 344 Mo. 1121, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 448 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

*1124 TIPTON, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County affirming the award of the Missouri Workmen’s Compensation Commission in awarding compensation for the death of John H. Miller to his widow and his adopted daughter, Jacqueline Miller. The award was as follows: To the widow, Philipene Vaseleou, the sum of $150 for burial expenses and the sum of $20 a week for 12 1/7 weeks (to the date of her remarriage), and to Philipene Vaseleou, as curatrix of the estate of Jacqueline Miller, a minor, the sum of $20 a week for 372 16/35 weeks.

The principle question for our decision in this case is: Was the deceased an employee of the St. Louis Union Trust Company, or was his relation with that company that of an independent contractor. Both parties to this litigation agree that if the status of Miller was that of an employee, then the compensation should have been awarded, but, on the other hand, if his status was that of an independent contractor, compensation should be denied.

Three witnesses testified for the respondents, the claimant, Philipene Vaseleou, and Robert Jones and Lin D. Ham, employees of the real estate department of the St. Louis Union Trust Company.

The appellants contend that there is no conflict in evidence, and, therefore, that whether the deceased was an independent contractor or an employee is a question of law and not one of fact. We have so held. [Mallory v. Louisiana Pure Ice & Supply Co., 320 Mo. 95, 6 S. W. (2d) 617; Maltz v. Jackoway-Katz Cap Co., 336 Mo. 1000, 82 S. W. (2d) 909.] However, the respondents contend that the commissions findings of fact are in the nature of a special verdict and conclusive if supported by any substantial competent - evidence. We have ruled thus in Rutherford v. Tobin Quarries, 336 Mo. 1171, 82 S. W. (2d) 918, and Phillips v. Air Reduction Sales Co., 337 Mo. 587, 85 S. W. (2d) 551. We see no distinction between these two principles of law. On a given state of facts, it is a question of law whether the relation of master and servant exists. This is so whether the facts are disputed or not. If the evidence is conflicting, then the facts that *1125 are found to be true by the triers of the facts must, as a matter of law, sustain the relation of employer and employee. Consequently, on a given state of facts it is as question of law whether those facts sustain the relation of master and servant. We will, therefore, examine the evidence and see if it, with all reasonable inferences drawn from it, supports the finding of the commission that the deceased was an employee of the appellants, the St. Louis Union Trust Company.

The St. Louis Union Trust Company, through its real estate department, acts as agent for numerous of its clients in matters concerning the management of their real estate, its duties, among other things, being to make repairs on the property it manages. Among the clients of the Trust Company was the St. Louis Realty and Securities Company, the alleged employer in this case, which owned various pieces of property in and around St. Louis, including property located at 21-25 North Gore Avenue, Webster Groves, Missouri. On March 3, 1937, while the deceased was doing repair work at this property he fell and sustained injuries of which he later died.

The relation between the deceased and the Trust Company began several years before this fatal accident when the Trust Company regularly engaged the services of the Shine Company, then owned by John P. Shine, father-in-law of the deceased, for the purpose of making whatever repairs were required upon the property under its supervision and control. After Shine’s death, the deceased bought the construction company from Shine’s widow and thereafter operated it. He continued to do the repair work for the Trust Company and for several years prior to his death he did work only for it, that is, he did no repair work for any other person. He worked on an average of three or four days a week and his pay was figured at $10 a day. When the Trust Company had a repair job, the deceased was called and he went with either Jones or Ham to make an estimate of what the repair job would cost, and if his estimate was reasonable he was told to go ahead and do the work. • Sometimes his estimate was written and sometimes .it was oral, but in figuring the job the Trust Company understood that the deceased allowed himself $10 a day, that He usually had two men helping him. On April 11, 1939, he received injuries while working on a building owned by the Securities Company and received compensation. The defense in that case was that he was an independent contractor but the St. Louis Court of Appeals held that he was an employee. The case, Miller v. St. Louis Realty & Securities Co., is reported in 103 S. W. (2d) 510. After this accident, the Trust Company required Miller to carry compensation insurance and to make a written estimate of the cost of each job. In some instances the estimate was not made until after the job was completed. As we read the record, this was done in order to establish the rate of insurance the Trust Company would have to pay the Travelers Insurance Company. On the Gore Avenue job, *1126 the deceased did not make an estimate of what the job would cost in advance, and after his death his widow was paid $75, which covered the cost of materials and allowed $10 a day for his time.

An “independent contractor” is one who, exercising an independent employment,, contracts to do a piece of work according to his own methods, without being subject to the control of his employer, except as to the result of his work. However, if the employer has the right to direct the details of how the job is to be performed or the manner in which the work is to be done, then the status of the one doing the work is that of an employee. And this is true though the employer does not exercise that right. The determination of whether one is an employee or an independent contractor must depend on the facts in the particular ease. [Maltz v. Jackoway-Katz Cap Co., supra; Rutherford v. Tobin Quarries, supra.]

There are certain portions of the evidence which, standing alone, would tend to show that the deceased was an independent contractor, but when the evidence is read as a whole, we think the commission correctly ruled that the status of the deceased was that of a.n employee within the meaning of the Compensation Laws.

Jones testified as follows:

“Q. On this job at 21-25 North Gore Avenue what was the basis of Mr. Miller’s pay per day, or what was the basis of his pay? A. By the time and material; the job was one the same basis as everything else, an allowance of $10.00 a day for his brickwork.

“Q. Have you had occasion, that is, during the year previous to March 3, 1937, to send Mr. Miller to more than one building for repair work? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Have you had occasion during that same period of time to take him off one job and move him to another before he completed his first? A. Yes.

“Q. Hnder your arrangement with him did you have the right to take him from one job to another if the necessity arose? A. Yes.

“ Q. If you had him working on this Gore. Avenue property and you wanted to take him and put him on another job before he finished this Gore Avenue job, did you have the right to do that? A. Yes.

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130 S.W.2d 538, 344 Mo. 1121, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaseleou-v-st-louis-realty-securities-co-mo-1939.