Woolley v. Ablah

240 P. 266, 119 Kan. 380, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 10, 1925
DocketNo. 26,113
StatusPublished

This text of 240 P. 266 (Woolley v. Ablah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolley v. Ablah, 240 P. 266, 119 Kan. 380, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 472 (kan 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action was one for damages for personal injury sustained by plaintiff when an elevator fell in defendants’ building where plaintiff was working. Plaintiff sued as an independent contractor. The defense was that he was a servant and defendants’ liability was for compensation; but if plaintiff were an independent contractor, defendants were not negligent. Plaintiff recovered, and defendants appeal.

The building was a three-story-and-basement brick building, the support of which consisted of wooden pillars resting on a dirt foundation, and portions of the building had settled so that all three stories were affected. Plaintiff was employed to level the structure. Leveling affected all the floors, and as the work progressed it was necessary for plaintiff to go from story to story to observe results. He was told to use the freight elevator, and did so. When going to the third story to observe its floor the control device of the elevator did not function, the car went on, struck a beam at the top of the [381]*381shaft, the cable parted, the dogs failed to- arrest descent of the car, and it fell to the bottom.

The building had long been occupied by the grocery company under lease from the owner. J. S. Ablah purchased the building. The grocery company continued as tenant under an unexpired lease which required the tenant to repair, and plaintiff was employed by the company. The negotiations with plaintiff were conducted by J. S. Ablah. To put the building in order required the removal of earth and rubbish from the basement, the laying of a cement floor, the leveling of the building, and after it was leveled a general tightening up. Plaintiff was not equipped to do the earth and cement work, which was let to some one else. He took the job' of leveling the building. The subsequent incidental work was not reached.

The terms of the employment were that plaintiff should furnish all necessary tools, appliances and labor. The company was to furnish all material and pay $2.50 per hour for the time consumed in doing the work. The price was fixed under these circumstances: Plaintiff was conducted to the basement, was shown the conditions, was told what was desired, and was asked what he would charge. Plaintiff said he could not tell how long it would take, and the only way he could figure on the job was by the hour. The uncertainty in respect to time resulted from the fact it was impossible to determine in advance the conditions which would be discovered. Some of the factors were: what supports would be found to be decayed when the building was lifted, how much of the old supports could be salvaged, and what new material would be needed. When the building was raised it was found pillars were rotted next to the ground, some more than others. To save material, which, it will be borne in mind, the company was required to provide, plaintiff suggested putting sawed-off old posts on cement footings, and the company furnished cement and sand for that purpose.

Plaintiff brought to the building his jacks, blocks, levels and other appliances, and a laborer whom he employed, entered upon the work, and three days later was injured. The jury returned the following findings:

“1. Did plaintiff and defendants enter into an oral contract with reference to the work to be done? A. Yes.
“2. Did such contract specify the exact work to be done, that is, the number of posts to be rebuilt and the location of each post and the extent of such work? A. No.
[382]*382“3. If you answer question No. 2 in the negative, state whether or not this was left to be decided by Woolley and the defendants as the work' progressed? A. No.
“4. Was any time specified by the contract in which the work was to be completed? A. No.
“5. Did either Woolley or the defendants know, at the time the contract was made, the extent of the work to be done? A. No.
“11. During the time the work was being done, did J. S. Ablah give instructions as to the manner in which the work was to be done, which were followed out? A. No.”

The company moved for judgment on the opening statement of counsel for plaintiff, demurred to plaintiff’s evidence, requested a peremptory instruction to find for the company, moved to set aside findings 3 and 11, moved for judgment in its favor on the findings, and moved for a new trial. In each instance the ruling was adverse, and each ruling is made the basis of an assignment of error. In final analysis all the assignments relate to the nature of the relation between plaintiff and the company—servant or contractor.

Finding 11 is contrary to Ablah’s testimony. Ablah is a wholesale grocer and a manufacturer of extracts and preserves. His testimony would indicate that he was not only in full control of the work plaintiff was employed to do, but directed execution of all the details. It may be he interfered some and talked more, but plaintiff testified as follows:

“Q. Now, when you were down there executing the work, did Mr. Ablah tell you how to do anything; in what way to do it? A. He never told me how to do anything.
“Q. Did you have any talk with him after you started to work? After you made your contract, did you have any talk with him about anything except the material that should be put in? A. No, sir; nothing except material.
“Q. The material for the supports and posts? A. Yes; I talked to him about the material, you know.
“Q. I believe you said he was furnishing the material? A. Yes, sir.”

The company makes much of the following question propounded to plaintiff, and the answer:

“When you came to some of the posts, did you call him down about some of the posts—there was a question about which to do? Some of the posts, I understood you, you took out and put in new ones; is that correct? A. Yes.”

It will be observed the question was double. That the answer was a response to the second question is shown by what followed:

“Q. Some of them you cut off and put concrete under, and some of them you left in there? A. Yes.
[383]*383“Q. Now, at the time you went from the basement to other floors, I suppose you talked to Mr. Ablah, or saw Mr. Ablah around there, when the building was jacked up? A. Yes, sir; I saw him.
“Q. Would he be around there with the level, or whatever it was you called' it? Á. Well, sometimes he was and sometimes he wasn’t.
“Q. Well, did you talk to him about that part of the work? A. I talked to him about that right on the start, about what had to be done, you know.
“Q. But as the work progressed,, did you talk to him some about it? A. Oh, yes; I would when he come; .made complaint to me about this door wouldn’t close up above; he come and told me the man could not open his office door; he came down and told me, and I went up and looked at it; told him what had to be done, you know.”

As indicated above, the company furnished material for pillar footings which plaintiff suggested. There was some talk about construction of these footings. Plaintiff testified as follows:

“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
240 P. 266, 119 Kan. 380, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolley-v-ablah-kan-1925.