Williams v. Baptist Church (Et Al.)

186 A. 168, 123 Pa. Super. 136, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 262
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 12, 1936
DocketAppeal, 21
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 186 A. 168 (Williams v. Baptist Church (Et Al.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Baptist Church (Et Al.), 186 A. 168, 123 Pa. Super. 136, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 262 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Jambs, J.,

On November 17, 1931, a compensation agreement for total disability was entered into between Yfilliam H. Williams, employee, the Baptist Church of Slatington, Pa., employer, by its secretary, and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, insurance carrier, by its adjuster, E. J. Brown. The date of the accident was October 27, 1931, and the accident and injury were described as follows: “While coming down off ladder, Claimant stumbled and fell off porch roof, a distance of about 14 feet, causing him to suffer abrasions of head and injury to spine.” Stamped across the face of the agreement was, “Approved Dec. 9, 1931. Bureau of Workmen’s Compensation.” On August 28, 1934, the insurance carrier filed its petition to review the agreement as provided by the first paragraph of section 413 of the Act of April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, for the following reasons: (1) That the agreement was entered into pursuant to a mutual mistake of law and fact in that the claimant at the time of the accident was an independent contractor, (2) that if the claimant was not an *139 independent contractor the agreement was entered into pursuant to a mutual mistake of law and fact in that claimant’s employment at the time of the accident was casual in character and not in the regular course of business of the employer. An answer, generally denying the averments of the petition and denying the agreement should be reviewed for the reason that the petitioner was not authorized to sign the petition on behalf of the Baptist Church, was filed. The referee, to whom the petition was referred, after hearing, found the following facts: “8. The claimant was engaged in an employment which was only occasional, irregular and incidental, for a limited and temporary purpose, and not connected with or constituting any continued employment. 9. The compensation agreement entered into between the parties was made under a mistake of law”; and stated as a conclusion of law: “3. Since the compensation agreement was entered into under a mistake of law, it is reviewable and should be set aside,” and thereupon entered an order setting aside the agreement. On appeal to the Compensation Board, the eighth and ninth findings of fact were set aside and the following findings substituted: “8. There is no evidence that the defendant and the insurance carrier did not, at the time compensation agreement was entered into on November 17, 1931 have full knowledge of all relevant facts pertaining to the accident and to the claimant’s injury. On the contrary the evidence is conclusive that the defendant did in fact have such full knowledge, and that the insurance carrier had it or could easily have obtained it. The compensation agreement was not founded upon a mistake of fact of any party to the agreement. 9. The petitioner has not met the burden of proof of showing that the compensation agreement was entered into under a mistake of law.” In its conclusions of law, the board overruled the referee and substituted the following: “2. The petitioner has not proved *140 that the compensation agreement was founded upon a mistake of law or of fact. 3. Since the petitioner did not file the petition to set aside the compensation agreement until two years and ten months after the date of the accident, the claimant has been deprived by the petitioner’s laches of his right of action at common law. The petitioner being unable to restore the status quo is estopped from setting up its own alleged mistake as a basis for setting aside the compensation agreement”; whereupon it entered an order dismissing the petition. The appeal to the court of common pleas was dismissed and judgment entered for the claimant, from which this appeal was taken by the insurance carrier.

Prom the testimony, taken before the referee, it appears that claimant, a quarryman, who occasionally did carpenter work, and a trustee of the Baptist Church, was employed by the board of trustees as a carpenter at the rate of 40 cents per hour to enclose a porch on a house owned and rented by the church, the work to be under the supervision of a co-trustee. Claimant had performed carpenter work upon the church and the houses belonging to the church on prior occasions, using his own tools, the materials being furnished by the church. Claimant had the right to quit his employment, and the church, the right to discharge him. The record does not disclose, outside of the narrative in the compensation agreement, how the accident happened. The estimated payroll, in the policy of insurance, included the wages of the claimant and Charles S. Stittler, the agent of the insurance carrier, was informed, prior to the execution of the compensation agreement, claimant was working at the houses belonging to the church. Ho testimony was offered that any of the parties to the agreement were mistaken as to the facts or law of the case.

The relationship between claimant and the church was not that of an independent contractor. “......the *141 general principle is that, if, in rendering services for a compensation, one is obliged to follow the will of his employer only as to the result of the work in hand and not as to the means by which it is to be accomplished, he is generally accounted an independent contractor. When, according to these tests, the evidence shows one, claiming as employee of a defendant, to be an independent contractor, relief under the Compensation Act must be denied; but neither the compensation authorities nor the courts should be solicitous to put claimants in that position when a reasonable view of the evidence warrants a finding that the injured person was an employee” : Gailey v. S. Workmen’s Insurance Fund, 286 Pa. 311, 133 A. 498. Under claimant’s employment, although it was for the purpose of enclosing the porch, he was obliged to follow the will of his employer and the latter was interested not alone in accomplishing the result, but the manner in which the work was done under the supervision of a member of the board of trustees; and either party was privileged to discontinue the employment. Such circumstances establish the relation of master and servant, but it does not follow that the injuries were compensable. By section 104 of the Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, 77 PS §22, an employee is excluded from the benefits of the act “whose employment is casual in character and not in the regular course of business of the employer.” An employment is casual in character where it is occasional, irregular or incidental as distinguished from regular and continuous, and an employment is in the regular course of the business of the employer only where it has reference to the normal operations which constitute the habitual or regular occupation that the employer is engaged in with an end to winning a livelihood or some gain, excluding incidental or casual operations arising out of the transaction of that business: Fedak v. Dzialdowski, 113 Pa. Superior Ct. 104, 107, 172 A. 187; Quick v. *142 E. B. Kintner & Son et al., 113 Pa. Superior Ct. 108, 172 A. 189; Passarelli v. Monacelli et al., 121 Pa. Superior Ct. 32, 183 A. 65. Applying these rules we find claimant’s employment to he both casual and not in the regular course of the business of the employer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 A. 168, 123 Pa. Super. 136, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-baptist-church-et-al-pasuperct-1936.