Weaver v. Mutual Building & Homestead Ass'n

195 So. 384, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 17
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 1940
DocketNo. 17076.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 195 So. 384 (Weaver v. Mutual Building & Homestead Ass'n) 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.

Bluebook
Weaver v. Mutual Building & Homestead Ass'n, 195 So. 384, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 17 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Paul Weaver, a slater, seeks recovery in compensation from Mutual Building and Homestead Association, averring that, on December 5, 1935, he sustained physical injuries while at work on the roof of a building owned by that corporation. He claims that, as a result, he has been permanently totally disabled.

In his original petition he alleges that he is entitled to $14.41 per week for four hundred weeks, but that, through misrepresentation amounting to fraud, he was induced to accept $150 in full settlement and that he joined with the said association in obtaining a judgment approving the said settlement.

He further charges that the compromise is “unconscionable and inequitable” and he prays that the said settlement be set aside and that he be awarded judgment for the amount to which he is entitled.

By supplemental petition he avers that in his original petition he miscalculated the amount to which he should have been entitled and that the correct amount should be $15.60 per week and he also alleges that the so-called compromise was, in truth and in fact, not a compromise at all, but amounted to the commuting of weekly payments into a lump sum and the discounting thereof at a rate of interest greater than 8 per cent., and he avers, therefore, that he is entitled to a penalty of 50 per cent, of the amount due, as provided by the compensation laws where a lump sum settlement is so discounted at a rate greater than is permissible.

To these petitions defendant filed an exception of no right or cause of action, which was overruled. Defendant then filed answer in which it reserved all rights under the exception and asserted that the compromise agreement had been lawfully entered into, without ’fraud or misrepresentation, and that it had been duly approved by the district court, in effect admitting that Weaver had sustained certain injuries, and asserting that he had not been employed by defendant but' was, in fact, an employee of his father, Harold Weaver, who, as an independent contractor, had been engaged by defendant to make repairs to the roof of a building belonging to defendant, and that it, defendant- — -the said association — -“is not engaged in the business or occupation of contracting for or of repairing houses or the roofs of houses” and that it “in no way supervises the work or has any connection with it other than the making of a. contract for such repairs with an independent contractor • * *

Defendant thus raises the contention that, even if the compromise should be set aside, there would be no liability to plaintiff in compensation since it is not engaged in the trade, business, or occupation of building or repairing houses, or in any other occupation within the coverage of the compensation laws.

After a trial there was judgment dismissing the suit and plaintiff has appealed.

Defendant maintains in this court that the matter should have been decided on the exception of no cause of action and we, therefore, first consider the petitions to determine whether those exceptions should have been sustained.

Defendant contends that the charges contained in plaintiff’s petition with reference to the facts, from which it is asserted that there was misrepresentation and fraud, arc so vague, general and indefinite that they consist of general conclusions only and that, therefore, the' exceptions should be sustained because of the absence of any allegation which would warrant the introduction of evidence. And it is also contended that the petition itself shows that the defendant is not engaged in and, at the time of the accident, was not engaged in any hazardous occupation contemplated by the compensation act, and that, therefore, under no circumstances could it be held liable in compensation to plaintiff even if it be conceded that all of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition are true.

The first contention — that there are no specific charges of misrepresentation— is not well founded, for, though it is true that most of the charges are neither detailed nor specific and, therefore, may be said to be mere conclusions, we do find at least one which may be characterized as specific and as alleging a fact which, if *386 true, might be construed as a misrepresentation. It is alleged that plaintiff was told that, regardless of the extent- of his injuries, even if defendant should be held to be liable, his recovery would be limited to a maximum amount of $300. Of course, this was not true, and, if such a statement was made and the circumstances under which it was made should justify the conclusion that it amounted to misrepresentation, it might be that we would be justified in setting aside the compromise induced thereby. For this reason and also because we would hesitate to dismiss a suit for compensation for mere insufficiency of allegation, we conclude that this contention is not well founded, and we proceed to a study of the more involved legal question which is presented by the other contention —that the petition itself affirmatively shows that defendant corporation was not engaged in one of the hazardous occupations contemplated by the act and therefore could not be liable in compensation to the employees of an independent contractor.

Defendant maintains that building and loan associations are not engaged in the repairing of buildings and are only permitted to do such work as' an incident to the principal purpose for which they are organized; that they may, of course, acquire buildings, and that when they do so they must have, as all owners have, the right to make repairs to those buildings, but that, even when they do so, they do not make themselves liable in compensation to those who may be employed in the repair work, and that, since they are not engaged in such business, section 6 of the workmen’s compensation statute has no application to them and does not make them liable to employees of independent contractors.

It is elemental, of course, that, in order that there be liability in compensation, not only must it be shown that the employee was engaged in the trade, business or occupation of the employer, but that it must also appear that the employer was engaged in one of those occupations contemplated by the compensation statute, Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended, and it is because of this principle that the Supreme Court, in Shipp v. Bordelon, 152 La. 795, 94 So. 399, 400, held the defendant not liable in compensation although the injured employee was hurt while engaged in repairing buildings, which is a hazardous employment. The court found that the defendant was not engaged in the business of building or repairing buildings and that such repair work as he found it necessary to undertake was merely incidental to his ownership of certain buildings. The court said: “We agree with counsel that it is not required, under our law, that the business of the employer must be exclusive, for one may have a dozen trades, businesses, or occupations. But, to become liable for compensation, he must be actually so engaged, as a trade, etc., and it is not enough that the work done should be hazardous if it be not also incident to or in the course of the trade, business, or occupation of the employer which is within itself hazardous under the statute.”

Following this principle, when we came to consider the. question in White v. Equitable Real Estate Company, Ltd., 18 La.App. 714, 139 So.

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 384, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-mutual-building-homestead-assn-lactapp-1940.