West Lumber Co. v. Powell

221 S.W. 339, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 448
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1920
DocketNo. 569.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 339 (West Lumber Co. v. Powell) 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
West Lumber Co. v. Powell, 221 S.W. 339, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 448 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This cause comes here by writ of error from a judgment of the district court of Liberty county, rendered in favor of defendant in error and against the plaintiff in error for $13,500. The defendant in error, Yancey Powell, who will for convenience be hereinafter referred to as “appellee,” filed the suit against the West Lumber Company, the plaintiff in error, who will for convenience be hereinafter referred to as “appellant,” seeking to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained in consequence of negligence on the part of appellant; the petition alleging, substantially, that appellee was injured while in the performance of his duties as an employé of appellant at its mill at Milvid, in Liberty county. Appellee alleged, substantially, that as a result of the injury he was totally disabled to perform any work that would require any considerable strength, and that his general health was thereby seriously impaired, and that such injuries were and are and will remain serious and permanent, and claimed damages in the sum of $15,000. The specific, grounds of negligence were, substantially, that the injury was due to the failure of appellant to provide a latch or *340 other proper fastening on a door of one of its dry kilns, at which appellee was required to perform his duties, said door being a very large and heavy one, and that in consequence of such failure said door fell and struck appellee, while performing his duties in the dry kiln, and that such negligence caused his injury. Defendant’s answer consisted of a general denial alone. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and the verdict was in appellee’s favor for $13,500, and judgment entered accordingly.

The first and second assignments of error raise substantially the same point, and challenge the action of the trial court in refusing to submit for the jury’s determination, as an issue of fact, whether or not appellee was an employé of appellant at the time he w£.s injured;, it being the contention of appellant that appellee was not its employé, in the legal acceptation of that term, hut that, on the contrary, he was an independent contractor, and that the relation of master and servant, or that of employer and employé did not exist between appellant and appellee, ihe court declined to submit such issue for the jury’s determination, but, on the contrary, assumed, evidently, that the undisputed evidence showed appellee to be appellant’s employé at the time he was injured, and that he was discharging the duties oj: his employrdent at the time'. After carefully analyzing the evidence adduced by both parties relative to this issue, we have reached the conclusion that there is practically no dispute in the evidence, and that therefore there was no issue of fact to go to the jury on that issue, and that the state of the evidence was such as to compel the trial court to treat that issue as one of law, and hold either that appellee was an employé of appellant and in the discharge of his duties at the time of his injury, or that he was an independent contractor. The accident in question occurred on September 12, 1917, and at that time the duties of appellee were as follows:

Appellant was engaged in operating a sawmill at Milvid, and in connection with its sawmill had erected certain dry kilns on its millyard platform, into which fresh or green lumber would be carried for the purpose of being more readily and quickly dried and made ready for use. The dry kiln at which appellee was injured was about 200 feet from the sawmill proper, where the lumber was sawed, and, as the green lumber would fall from the saw, it was placed upon a large truck drawn by a mule and Carried out from the saw some distance on appellant’s mill platform, and there the mule truck, which was in control of a driver, would be met by. appellee and another, who thereupon unloaded the mule truck and placed the lumber taker therefrom on a smaller truck, called a push truck, and this push truck, when loaded, would be placed at some convenient point on a track on the platform, and I the mule truck would return to the saw and get another load, and again return to a point on the platform, and again' be met by appellee and the other man assisting him, and the same would be again unloaded and reloaded on another push truck, which would in turn be placed at a convenient point on the platform track, and this operation would go on for an entire day; and the next day these push trucks would be moved by appellee and the other man assisting him, and pushed along a track on the platform to the dry kiln, and placed therein for the purpose of drying the lumber, as before stated. Eor such services so performed by appellee, he was paid 90 cents for each truck of lumber that he so handled and placed in the dry kiln, and the man assisting him was paid the same.

Under his contract of employment with appellant, appellee was required to regularly meet this mule truck, and so handle the lumber as to keep it out of thg way and properly distribute it, and, in stacking the lumber upon the smaller truck, it was required of him that it be stacked so many tiers in width and so many tiers in height, etc. In performing and discharging his duties under this contract of employment, appellee was subject to the orders and control of appellant’s foreman, a Mr. Brashfield, and if this lumber was not handled and stacked and placed in the dry kiln in accordance with the foreman’s instructions and orders, and according to appellee’s agreement, then appellant’s foreman had the right and authority to discharge appellee because of his failure, if any, to so comply. The trucks themselves, by means of which the lumber was handled by appellee, belonged to appellant, and were under the exclusive control and management of appellant, and appellee and his assistant or partner, as some of the witnesses called him, were paid on regular pay days, when all other employés were paid by appellant, and were paid by the same paymaster, and at the same place where other employés were paid, and the same bookkeeper of appellant, who kept the time of all its em-ployés, also kept the books relative to appel-lee’s compensation, and, in short, the only difference that could possibly be claimed to exist between appellee and any other ordinary employé at appellant’s mill, in so far as their relations to appellant are concerned, was that appellee and the other men doing the same work he was doing were paid so much per truck for each load of lumber handled and placed in the dry kiln, while other employés were perhaps paid by the day or some other period of time.

We say that the foregoing statement is a sufficiently full and fair and complete statement of the material facts, as shown by the evidence in detail, necessary to be shown in *341 disposing of the assignments under consideration, and it is appellant’s contention that these facts raise the issue, if they do not compel a finding, that appellee was an independent contractor at the time he was injured, and was not appellant’s employé, and that there was no relation of master and servant between them.

In the case of Cunningham v. Railroad Co., 51 Tex. 510, 32 Am. Rep. 632, the Supreme Court, among other things, used this language:

“In the first relation, that of master and servant, the master has the right to direct the conduct of the servant and the mode and manner of doing the work, and hence his corresponding ’liability for an improper execution of the same. Wood on Master and Servant, § 281.

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221 S.W. 339, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-lumber-co-v-powell-texapp-1920.