Winchester v. Seay

409 S.W.2d 378, 219 Tenn. 321, 23 McCanless 321, 1966 Tenn. LEXIS 531
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 409 S.W.2d 378 (Winchester v. Seay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winchester v. Seay, 409 S.W.2d 378, 219 Tenn. 321, 23 McCanless 321, 1966 Tenn. LEXIS 531 (Tenn. 1966).

Opinion

Mr. .Chief Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*323 This is a Workmen’s Compensation case, which was dismissed by the trial judge because he found that Winchester was a mere casual employee of the Bushes and was not performing any duties at the time of the injury for Seay. An appeal has been seasonably perfected, briefs filed, arguments heard, and, after studying the record, briefs, etc., and making an independent investigation of the matter, we have the question for ¡disposition.

Winchester was a regular employee of the defendant in error, Seay, at the Grand Hotel in Chattanooga, where he performed the duties of a handy man, such as painting, pipe fitting, firing the boiler, and running the elevator, for which he was paid $25.00 per week. The defendants in error, the Bushes, resided in the Grand Hotel, and defendant in error, Thalia Bush, operated a restaurant about two doors from the hotel.

On April 20, 1964, Winchester received a laceration of his left ring finger while cutting a piece of metal to place under the air conditioner located over the back door of the restaurant building. This work was done at the request of Thalia Bush and with the permission, or acquiescence, of the regular employer, Seay, who had previously advised the petitioner that the Bushes were guests of the Grand Hotel and that any “little thing” he could do at Bush’s place would be appreciated. The petitioner testified specifically as to the injury and how he came to be doing the work when he was hurt thus:

“Q Now, Mr. Winchester, on the 20th of May, 1964, tell us what happened insofar as how you got hurt? How did you happen to go down to Bush’s?
“A Well, she sent one of the boys come over there and told me, and I went over there to get a cup of *324 coffee. I said I would do — I said ‘Yes, ma’am.’ She done and went and got a piece of metal to put in there, and it was too short. I go back and got a piece a little longer than that about that wide (indicating).
“"When I went to slit it open, when I got the piece moved, the other one rolled up and caught that finger, whacked her open.”

He then goes on to tell of what treatment he had had. Mrs. Bush, or Thalia Bush, paid the doctor’s bill. He likewise says he did this work at her request and suggestion and under her supervision, and that she compensated him for such work. He had done at least one job before that for which she had paid him. The record indicates that she had not paid him for this particular job, but paid him more or less on a tip basis when he came to do something like this, or gave him a dollar for some work of the kind when it was done. He was not directed on this day to go over there and do that work. He merely went on his own because his regular employer had informed him some years before since the Bushes were residents of the hotel he could do little things to help them as he wanted to. Under such circumstances the question is whether or not the work here being done is casual under our statute. Sub-section (b) of T.C.A. sec. 50-906 provides:

“Any person whose employment at the time of injury is casual, that is, one who is not employed in the usual course of trade, business, profession, or occupation of the employer.”

Or is it compensable, and, if so, who is responsible for paying compensation to one thus injured.?

*325 The first thing* we mast consider is whether or not this work was casual so as to exclude it from the provisions of the Act. The services being performed at the time of these injuries, it is true, were more or less casual in character in the sense at least that they were not continuous and were performed only at intervals as necessity might arise. This though is true of many services which, all would concede, are necesary for the purpose of the trade or business. The question cannot have one rule applied that can determine the result in every case. The facts of each case must be weighed and considered.

It is argued by the defendants in error that the material, or substantial, evidence rule precludes a reversal of this case, because the trial judge found that this was mere casual employment. There is practically no conflict in the evidence and the relationship of Winchester to the defendants in error was a question of law. See Cayll v. Industrial Commission, 172 Wis. 554, 179 N.W. 771.

This being true, we now come to the determination of whether or not such employment was casual or if such an injury received in the course of such employment should be compensated. In the recent case of Armstrong v. Spears, 216 Tenn. 643, 393 S.W.2d 729, we again quoted, and adopted as the correct reasoning and rule to follow in such cases, from Volume 1 of Larson on Compensation, beginning particularly on page 765, as follows:

“ ‘Behind all of these decisions lies one simple thought; maintenance, repair, painting, cleaning and the like are “in the course” of business because the business could not be carried on without them, and because they are expectable, routine and inherent part of carrying on any enterprise.’ ”

*326 The author of this treatise after discussing at length the reason for this statement and citing cases from many jurisdictions, showing the minority as well as the majority rule, and the statutes in various states, ends on .page 767 with this statement:

‘1 The net effect, then, is that such ancillary activities as- maintenance and repair are now generally deemed to he within the course of an employer’s usual business.”'

It is said in the Armstrong case, supra, wherein we followed this reasoning, which we had some years before followed in other cases, that this was the applicable rule to adopt when the facts so showed. We unhesitatingly feel that this is the correct rule and principle to apply in such a case, and find, as a matter of law, that under the facts of the instant case this was not such a casual employment by the Bushs as to exclude the employee from compensation, if and when injured in the course of doing this service.

We next come to the problem of who is responsible for such compensation in the case of a loaned employee as was Winchester herein. There is no one rule of application which can determine or resolve the question in every such case. In 1921, Mr. Justice Cardozo in writing for the Harvard Law Review about this question observed that the law pertaining to general and special employers •is “dissent with distinctions so delicate that chaos is the consequence.” Cardozo, A Ministry of Justice, 35 Harvard Law Review, 113, 121. It has likewise been said that “Respectable authority for almost any position can be found.” Nepstad v. Lambert, 235 Minn. 1, 50 N.W.2d 614, 620. The loaned employee question has not *327

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Bluebook (online)
409 S.W.2d 378, 219 Tenn. 321, 23 McCanless 321, 1966 Tenn. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winchester-v-seay-tenn-1966.