W. H. Butcher Packing Co. v. Hixon

1941 OK 380, 119 P.2d 1019, 189 Okla. 700, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 12, 1941
DocketNo. 30178.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1941 OK 380 (W. H. Butcher Packing Co. v. Hixon) 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
W. H. Butcher Packing Co. v. Hixon, 1941 OK 380, 119 P.2d 1019, 189 Okla. 700, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 361 (Okla. 1941).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This is an original proceeding brought by W. H. Butcher Packing Company and its insurance carrier, Consolidated Underwriters, as petitioner, to obtain a review of an award made by the Industrial Commission to Ralph Hixon, respondent.

Respondent lives on a farm near Guthrie, Okla. One of his occupations consists of selling and distributing along a certain route extending out of said city meat and other products packed and prepared for sale at the Oklahoma City plant of W. H. Butcher Packing Company.

The injury which gave rise to the proceedings for respondent’s compensation resulted from an automobile accident in which respondent was involved on the afternoon of July 15, 1940, while en route from the packing company’s plant to Langston University, at Langston, Okla., which is on his regular route or “territory.” His mission on said journey was to deliver to said institution 300 hams which it had ordered from the packing company and which he was transporting in his own coupe automobile at the time of the accident.

It is conceded that the business of the petitioner, W. H. Butcher Packing Company, is hazardous, and that the respondent sustained an accidental injury, but it is earnestly insisted on behalf of both petitioners that the Industrial Commission was without jurisdiction to award the respondent compensation for three reasons. The first of these is that respondent was an independent contractor rather than an employee of W. H. Butcher Packing Company. A determination of the question thus presented requires a review of portions of the evidence.

According to the undisputed facts, W. H. Butcher Packing Company remunerates the respondent for his services in selling and distributing its products by paying his 25 per cent of the sale price of all such products that are sold and delivered to customers that respondent calls on along his route, whether he takes the order for a particular sale, or whether it is transmitted directly by the customer. Out of his commissions, Hixon defrays the expense of delivering said products to the customers he serves, irrespective of whether same are delivered in his own automobile or by a different means of transportation. Most of such deliveries are made in a truck owned, operated, and maintained by the respondent for this purpose. In his ordinary daily routine respondent drives his truck from his home near Guthrie to the packing company’s plant in Oklahoma City, where it is loaded with the necessary cargo to fill the orders that he has received while calling upon the company’s customers along his route the day before or have been otherwise received at the plant before his departure. After his truck is loaded, respondent then proceeds along his route in it, delivering the contents thereof to their various destinations, soliciting new orders for the company and sometimes collecting the proceeds of sales already made. Such receipts he delivers to the packing company when he goes to Oklahoma City the next morning together with the orders he has received, unless he has occasion to go there before that time, as in case of a special order, like the one in question from Langston University, that requires earlier delivery. In the instances of some special orders received from customers on the respondent’s route, the goods to fill them are shipped by rail to the respondent at Guthrie, who, after paying the shipping charges, delivers them to their ultimate destination in his truck. Often, however, where such orders are large and the shipping charges thereon would be proportionately large, or where the order is received too late for the products specified therein to reach their destination by other means at the time desired by the customer, and where, as in case of the Langston delivery, respondent has other *702 reasons for so doing not connected in any manner with the packing company’s business, he makes a second trip to Oklahoma City in the afternoon after completing his regular route, picks up the goods for said order, and before the end of the day delivers them either in his truck or the car he was driving when injured.

As indicated, the manner and methods employed by the respondent in performing his work are matters of his own choice. According to the undisputed testimony, all that W. H. Butcher Packing Company requires of the respondent by the agreement or contract under which he is now working is that its products be sold and delivered on his route. Although there is testimony to the effect that under his arrangement with said company, the respondent is obliged to try to keep its customers on his route satisfied, and that the company reserves the right to “fire” him if he conducts himself in a manner unbecoming a salesman of its merchandise, there is no evidence that any of its officers, agents, or employees either have or exercise the power to direct the manner in which the general objects of respondent's services are attained. (In this connection, see Sawin v. Nease, 186 Okla. 195, 97 P. 2d 27.) There is evidence to the effect that a short time before the accident in question the respondent was notified that said company wished to be relieved of shipping large orders for distribution on respondent’s route, but the evidence overwhelmingly supports the conclusion that respondent’s only direct responsibility to said company regarding the delivery of any of its products is to see that they are taken from its plant and delivered to its customers. The company exercises no control or supervision over respondent’s activities in accomplishing this. A large portion of the time he has hired a young man or boy to help him load and unload his truck, and since respondent has been incapacitated by reason of the automobile accident, this work has been done by such an employee without assistance from him and under the supervision, of his wife, who has conducted the route since that time, and has earned the same commissions from sales on it that respondent previously earned.

It will be seen from the foregoing statement that the respondent is not a servant of W. H. Butcher Packing Company within the general rule that those rendering service, but retaining control over the manner of doing it, are not servants. In many respects the respondent’s situation in the present case is similar to that of the contractors in the cases of Blackwell Cheese Co. v. Pedigo, 186 Okla. 159, 96 P. 2d 1043; Ellis & Lewis, Inc., v. Trimble, 177 Okla. 5, 57 P. 2d 244; Maryland Casualty Co. v. State Industrial Commission, 148 Okla. 204, 298 P. 275 (compare Modern Motors, Inc., v. Elkins, 189 Okla. 134, 113 P. 2d 969). And we think that the present case is so nearly analogous to Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. Greenlee, 150 Okla. 69, 300 P. 684, and Harrington v. H. D. Lee Mercantile Co., 97 Mont. 40, 33 P. 2d 553, that the decisions in those cases are highly persuasive if not controlling here. To demonstrate this we quote at length from the opinions in the latter cases. In the Oklahoma Publishing Company Case, supra, it was said:

“. . . The respondent, in the performance of the work under the contract, used his own automobile truck, and hired two boys who rode. on the sides of the car, and either delivered or threw the papers to the various subscribers of the Oklahoma Publishing Company. There was no route mapped out or designated for him to take, or as to how or where he should go. This was entirely left to respondent. Respondent was given a commission for what customers he could obtain, and was allowed a commission of 19 3/4 cents on each paper each week to each customer in addition to the $25 per week.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Danna v. Economy Heat & Air Savers, Inc.
1983 OK CIV APP 24 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1983)
Wolfe v. Shiprock Corporation
1970 OK 53 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1970)
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Bandy
1970 OK 32 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1970)
Mahl v. McMahan
1958 OK 99 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1958)
Townley Dairy Farms v. Greenwood
1957 OK 257 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)
In Re Greenwood
1957 OK 257 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)
Harrill v. State Industrial Commission
1953 OK 186 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)
Thompson v. Braselton Federal Insulating & Bldg. Materials Co.
1950 OK 264 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1950)
Cities Service Oil Co. v. Kindt
1947 OK 219 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1947)
Atlas Life Ins. Co. of Tulsa v. Foraker
1946 OK 17 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1946)
Hobart Lumber Co. v. Fells
1942 OK 34 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1941 OK 380, 119 P.2d 1019, 189 Okla. 700, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-butcher-packing-co-v-hixon-okla-1941.