Judges: Becker, Daues, Nipper, Sutton
Filed Date: 6/2/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The accident in which plaintiff received the injuries for which he sues occurred at the northwest corner of Fifteenth and Market streets, in the city of St. Louis, late in the afternoon, on September 15, 1921. The defendant, a Missouri corporation, was engaged in the business of publishing and distributing a newspaper known as the St. Louis Times. Its plant was located at *Page 62 Broadway and Chestnut street in said city. One George D. Bresler delivered the base-ball edition of the Times to dealers for defendant on what was known as the Manchester run. Bresler used a Ford touring car in making these deliveries. The papers were wrapped in bundles at defendant's plant and labels were placed on the bundles showing where and to whom the bundles were to be delivered. Bresler sometimes permitted a boy by the name of Schrell to assist him in delivering the papers. Schrell was assisting in the deliveries at the time of the accident. Bresler drove the automobile, and Schrell rode in the back seat and threw the bundles from the automobile at the places of delivery. The northwest corner of Fifteenth and Market was on the Manchester run, and Bresler was required to deliver a bundle of papers at that place for a dealer by the name of Samuels. At the time of his injury the plaintiff was standing on the sidewalk at the northwest corner of Fifteenth and Market. Bresler in making his deliveries drove westward on Market street, and as he passed the northwest corner of Fifteenth and Market Schrell threw a bundle of papers from the automobile and struck the plaintiff with it in the left eye, inflicting the injuries for which he sues.
Plaintiff testified: "I was walking west along Market street and stopped for a moment to wipe my forehead, and the next thing I thought lightning struck me. I didn't know what happened. I felt like all the light had gone out of me. It was a sudden shock. I didn't know what in the world was going on. I was hit by something. Immediately after the bundle struck me I didn't see anything. When I sufficiently recovered my composure, I saw that bundle of papers lying at my feet, and I saw an automobile about a block away, going west. I saw two persons in the automobile; they were looking backwards. They were not near enough for me to identify them. The bundle you now show me is the bundle I found lying at my feet. It contains copies of the St. Louis Times. That is the bundle that hit me. The spot on the bundle *Page 63 is blood. I was bleeding so profusely that the blood was just all over the sidewalk and some of it got on the bundle. After the accident I went to the City Dispensary and the surgeon in charge laid me out on a slab there and made two or three stitches in the wound, which was a cut over the lower lid in the inner corner of the left eye. There is a mark there yet. It cut through the lower lid. I am fifty-three years old and reside at Chicago. At the time of my injury, I was employed as a railway mail clerk, distributing mail en route between Chicago and St. Louis, and received a salary of $2,300 per year. After they finished with me at the City Dispensary I went to where I generally stopped, where I sleep here, and when I got there the man in charge of the building told me somebody had been there from the Times to see me. I then went home to Chicago. I did not work back; the run went by default; I was unable to make the run. In Chicago I obtained medical treatment for my eye. I was under treatment of a physician there from September 15th to October 7th. My face was bandaged and I had to have the doctor examine the eye and dress the wound. My bill for treatment was twenty-nine dollars. On the latter date I returned to my work. On going back to work I discovered my eyesight was very much weakened, so much so in fact I had to use a magnifying glass to decipher addresses that were poorly written. I never had to do this before I was injured. My eye has continued in the condition I have just described I might say practically to this day. It has gained in strength, that is, I do not have to use a magnifying glass, but I am never able to do anything without glasses at all. I have never since the accident been able to read without glasses. Prior to my injury I never had to use glasses except to work at night. Now I cannot work at any time without glasses. I found that bundle of papers at my feet and from that I make the deduction that it was what hit me."
The bundle identified by the plaintiff was introduced in evidence. It contained ten copies of the base-ball *Page 64 edition of the St. Louis Times, and was labeled thus: "Manchester run. Samuels Sat 5 D 10 15th and Market." It was wrapped in cylindrical form, was about eighteen inches in length, three or four inches in diameter, and weighed about three pounds. It has been brought here with the record for the inspection of the court by the consent of the parties.
Dr. John Ryburn of the St. Louis City Dispensary, produced on behalf of plaintiff, testified that he treated plaintiff on September 15, 1921, for a laceration of the lower lid of the left eye, about one-half inch in length; that he treated the wound and took one stitch in same; and that on his examination he did not detect any injury at that time to the eye.
George D. Bresler, produced on behalf of plaintiff, testified: "During the base-ball season I had a contract with defendant to deliver papers for it in the late afternoon with my own machine, at five dollars per run, amounting to thirty-five dollars per week. I only delivered papers for defendant during the base-ball season. During the rest of the year I sold papers at corner boxes. I made arrangements to deliver papers for defendant, with Mr. Pollard, defendant's circulation manager, about four years prior to 1921. I was hired by Mr. Pollard. After I made that arrangement with Mr. Pollard, I came down every season and went back to work. I would come down and find out if I would get my job back. I got my job back in 1921 when the base-ball season started. Mr. Pollard was not there then. Mr. Bangor was the one who told me to come back. I just came to him and said, ``Bill, am I going back this year?' and he said, ``certainly.' He said, ``You go back on your job.' After that I came there every evening and delivered this run. Bangor had charge of the papers when they left the press room to be put on the machines to be sent out to the different stations. On the day that the plaintiff was hurt I left the corner of the Times Building on my regular run. I went out Chestnut to Fourteenth, south to Market, *Page 65 then west, until I got to the city limits. I had a bundle to deliver at Fifteenth and Market. The boy, Schrell, who was with me that day, threw the bundle off. I let him go with me every day. If he would be there going out I would take him. He went with me two or three times a week, throwing off bundles. On the various occasions when he rode with me, he sat in the back of the car and dropped the bundles off for me until we got to Eighteenth street. As I passed the corner of Fifteenth and Market on the day the accident happened, the bundle was thrown off. I slowed down for the bundle to be thrown off. Schrell was employed in the post office department and weighed mail at the Times office. Every time I would see him he would say, ``Are you going west,' and I would say, ``sure.' I would give him a lift and he would throw these bundles off to help me out. I did not pay him anything to do that."
Defendant offered no evidence. Schrell, Pollard, and Bangor were not produced as witnesses, nor were they accounted for.
The defendant assigns reversible error upon the refusal of its demurrer to the evidence. The chief ground urged in support of this assignment is that the evidence conclusively shows that Bresler was an independent contractor and not a mere servant of defendant. It is argued that the undisputed evidence shows that Bresler was under contract with defendant to deliver its papers during the base-ball season, for a round sum, employing his own means and methods, without being subject to the control of defendant except as to the results of his work, and that therefore he should be adjudged an independent contractor as a matter of law.
"The general rule is, that one who has contracted with a competent and fit person, exercising an independent employment, to do a piece of work, not in itself unlawful or attended with danger to others, according to the contractor's own methods, and without his being subject to control, except as to the results of his *Page 66
work, will not be answerable for the wrongs of such contractor, his sub-contractor, or his servants, committed in the prosecution of such work. An independent contractor is one who renders service in the course of an occupation, representing the will of his employer only as to the result of his work, and not as to the means by which it is accomplished." [Gayle v. Missouri Car
Foundry Co.,
"The general rule is that one employing a competent person, exercising an independent occupation, to do a work for him which is not unlawful in itself or dangerous to others, and retaining no control of the methods such person may adopt or power to direct or control him in the work except as to the results, will not be answerable for the wrongful or negligent acts of such contractor or his servants committed in the prosecution of the work." [Loth v. Columbia Theatre Co.,
"Although, in a general sense, every person who enters into a contract may be called a ``contractor,' yet that word, for want of a better one, has come to be used with special reference to a person who, in the pursuit of an independent business, undertakes to do a certain piece of work for other persons, using his own means and methods, without submitting himself to their control in respect of all its details. The true test of a ``contractor' would seem to be that he renders the service in the course of an independent occupation, representing the will of his employer only as to the result of his work, and not as to the means by which it is accomplished." [Mullich v. Brocker,
"The term contractor is applicable to all persons following a regular, independent employment, in the course of which they offer their services to the public to accept orders and execute commissions for all who may employ them in a certain line of duty, using their own means for the purpose and being accountable only for final performance." [Cooley on Torts (2 Ed.), p. 647; Mullich v. Brocker,
"The relation of master and servant only exists where the person sought to be charged as master either employed or controlled the servant, or had the right of control over him at the time when the injury happened, or expressly, or tacitly assented to the rendition of the particular service by him. He must, at the time, have had the right to direct the action of the servant and to accept or reject its rendition by him." [Mound City Paint Color Co. v. Conlon,
"In every case the conclusive test to be sought after, by which to determine whether or not the immediate actor was the servant of the defendant, is, whether the defendant reserved control
over him as to the manner of doing the work. . . . The power to control implies the power to discharge for disobedience; and accordingly the power to discharge has frequently been regarded as the test by which to determine whether the relation of master and servant existed. . . . A person who, skilled in a particular employment, engages with another to do a particular job of work for a round sum, reserving to himself the right to determine by what methods he shall accomplish the work, is regarded as an independent contractor, and not as the servant or agent of the other contracting party, in the sense which makes the latter responsible for any wrong he may commit in the doing of the work." [Fink v. Missouri Furnace Co.,
"The right to control the work contracted for is an important test in determining whether the employee is an independent contractor or a mere servant, and it may be stated generally that if the employee is under the control of the employer he is a servant, but if in the performance of the work he is not under the control of the employer he is an independent contractor. . . . The fact that the employer may at any time terminate the performance of the work by discharging the employee is of considerable weight as tending to show that the employee is not an independent contractor. . . . The fact that an employee by his contract with his employer is bound to furnish the materials or tools with which the work shall be done affords but little light on the question of his independence, but such fact has in some cases been considered as tending to show independence. . . . The mode of payment for the work to be done is an important element to be considered in determining whether the employee is an independent contractor but is not concontrolling. . . . However, . . . the right to control the manner of doing the work is the principal consideration which determines whether the worker is an employee or an independent contractor. . . . The test of relationship is the right to control. It is not the fact of actual interference with the control but the right to interfere that makes the difference between an independent contractor and a servant or agent." [Bristol Gale Co. v. Industrial Commission,
"Whether the relation between the person sought to be charged for an alleged wrong and the immediate actor by whom the alleged wrong was done, was that of master and servant, or proprietor and independent contractor, is frequently a question of fact for the jury, the solution of which depends upon a variety of circumstances." [Fink v. Missouri Furnace Co.,
"It is impossible to lay down a rule by which the status of men working and contracting together can be definitely defined in all cases as employees or independent contractors. Each case must depend on its own facts, and ordinarily no one feature of the relation is determinative, but all must be considered together. Ordinarily the question is one of fact." [31 Corpus Juris 473, 474.]
"When the facts are undisputed no doubt exists that the court may declare as a matter of law whether one is an independent contractor or merely a servant, . . . but where the facts are disputed the proper course it seems to us must be to leave it to the jury under proper instructions to say whether one was an independent contractor or a servant, accordingly as the facts are found." [Gayle v. Missouri Car Foundry Co.,
"If defendant claims that he is not liable because the work was being done by an independent contractor, it seems that the burden is upon him to prove such relationship." [26 Cyc. 1573; Schneider v. Maney,
"Where the party who has not the general burden of proof possesses positive and complete knowledge concerning the existence of facts which the party having that burden is called upon to negative, or where for any reason the evidence to prove a fact is chiefly if not entirely within the control of the adverse party, it has been held that the burden of proof, meaning the burden of evidence, is on the party who knows or has special opportunity for knowing the fact, even in criminal cases, although he is obligated to go no farther than necessity requires." [Schneider v. Maney,
"Slight circumstances are sufficient to establish a fact where the defendant is peculiarly possessed with power to disprove it and fails to adduce such evidence." [Davenport v. King Electric Co.,
In the present case, Bresler, who was employed by defendant to deliver its papers to dealers, was not following or exercising a regular independent employment or occupation, in the course of which he offered his services to the public to accept orders and execute commissions for all who might employ him in a certain line of duty. He was not engaged in the work of delivering papers to dealers as an independent employment or occupation. He performed this character of work for the defendant only. Nor was he engaged in the work of hauling and delivering commodities of any character as an independent employment or occupation. For four successive years prior to the year in which the accident occurred, Bresler had delivered defendant's base-ball edition over the Manchester run during the baseball seasons at five dollars per trip, which was paid to him at the end of each week of service. In 1921, the year the accident in question occurred, Bresler was again employed to deliver the base-ball edition at the same price per trip he had previously received. He continued to do the work at this price for awhile. Some time prior to the accident defendant announced a general reduction in the salaries of its employees. Bresler's salary was reduced along with that of the other employees. His salary was reduced from $35 to $30 per week. He complained of the reduction, but accepted it, and proceeded with his work as before. He did not base his complaint, however, on the ground that defendant had no right to make the reduction under its contract with him. Within a few days after the accident out of which this suit arose, defendant discharged Bresler on account of the accident. Bresler during his employment was required to report promptly each afternoon when the base-ball edition *Page 71 was ready for delivery and to make immediate deliveries to all the dealers on the Manchester run. Occasionally he was required to make an earlier delivery on the Olive street run for which he received additional compensation. He was also at times required to make deliveries at Forest Park Highlands which was not on his regular run. These deliveries were made without extra compensation. The papers delivered by Bresler were wrapped in bundles by the defendant at its plant. There were attached to each bundle labels designating the run on which it was to be delivered, the dealer it was to be delivered to, and the place of delivery. There was nothing in the contract or the conduct of the work conclusively showing that the defendant surrendered the right to control Bresler in the means and methods of doing his work. Bresler, it is true, used his own conveyance, a Ford touring car, in doing his work, and kept it in repair and provided the necessary gas and oil for it, as it seems he was required to do under the contract of employment. But it does not appear that he was entitled to discard the automobile and employ other means of conveyance, and adopt other methods, in making his deliveries as he might choose.
It is manifest that in this state of the evidence the question as to whether Bresler was an independent contractor or a mere servant of the defendant was for the jury.
The defendant places much reliance upon Gall v. Detroit Journal Co.,
"The said Rebtoy shall make such delivery and distribution according to his own means and methods of *Page 72 conveyance, which shall belong to and be in the exclusive charge and control of said Rebtoy, and which shall not be subject to the control or supervision by the company excepting as to the results of said work."
This provision of the contract was stressed by the court, and was controlling in the decision of the case. The court, referring to the circumstances shown in evidence, to-wit, that the company had the right to designate the persons and places to whom the papers would be delivered, that Rebtoy was paid by the week, and that he was not a licensed drayman, said:
"All of these things might be important in determining the relation of the employer and employed in a doubtful case, but they are not controlling in the face of a definite contract which clearly defines the relation."
It is obvious that the Rebtoy case affords no support for the defendant's position in this case.
Defendant insists further that the petition alleges specific acts of negligence as the cause of plaintiff's injury, and that, having done so, he is required to prove such specific acts and cannot rely on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, that he failed to prove the specific acts of negligence alleged, and that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained on this ground. The petition alleges:
"That in the City of St. Louis, Missouri, on the 15th day of September, 1921, the defendant was engaged in delivering bundles containing copies of its newspaper, and employed an automobile for said purpose; and, by its servants and agents then and there in charge of the delivery of said bundles, negligently hurled a large, heavy bundle of newspapers from said automobile while the same was moving westwardly on Market street in said city, and struck the plaintiff therewith, while plaintiff was standing upon the sidewalk of said street, thereby causing plaintiff's face and eyes to be cut, bruised, contused, lacerated, infected and inflamed; that defendant's said servants on said occasion negligently threw said *Page 73 bundle from said automobile while the automobile was in motion, and negligently threw said bundle in an improper and reckless manner, with great force, and without looking in the direction in which they were about to throw the same."
Defendant urges in argument that the charge of negligence is that the bundle in question was thrown from a moving automobile by defendant's servants in an improper and reckless manner, with great force, and without looking in the direction in which they were about to throw the same, that this is a specific allegation of negligence, and that there is no proof to sustain it.
There was direct proof that the bundle was thrown by Schrell from the automobile to the sidewalk where plaintiff was standing, while the automobile was in motion, and that the bundle struck the plaintiff in the face with great force. The bundle must have been thrown in the direction of the plaintiff's face, else it would not have struck him in the face. It must have been thrown with great force, else it would not have struck him with great force. The throwing of the bundle from a moving automobile with great force in the direction of the plaintiff's face while he was standing on the sidewalk of a public street, without more, was a grossly negligent act. The act was sufficiently alleged in the petition and was adequately proved by direct evidence without the aid of presumptions arising under the res ipsa loquitur rule. The failure of plaintiff to prove the additional specification of negligence, to-wit, that the bundle was thrown by defendant's servants "without looking in the direction in which they were about to throw the same," is unimportant. It was not essential that he prove all the specifications of negligence contained in the petition. It was only essential that he prove sufficient of them to make out a case against the defendant.
Defendant presses upon our attention the circumstance that the plaintiff testified that the accident happened at 4:53 p.m., whereas Bresler testified that he *Page 74 did not leave the Times Building until 5:11 p.m. Defendant says that this conclusively shows that the bundle of papers which struck the plaintiff could not have been thrown from Bresler's automobile, and that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained on this ground. This slight discrepancy in the testimony may well be accounted for as the result of mistake on the part of one or the other of the witnesses. The discrepancy must be regarded as of little importance in view of the other facts and circumstances in evidence tending strongly to show that the bundle which struck the plaintiff was thrown by Schrell from Bresler's automobile.
Defendant makes the further contention that Schrell, who threw the bundle of papers from the automobile and struck the plaintiff with it, was a mere volunteer for whose tortious act the defendant is in no way responsible. There is no merit in this contention. Schrell threw the bundle in Bresler's immediate presence, under his immediate supervision, with his assent, and in accordance with his wish and desire. Schrell was taken into the automobile in order that he might throw the bundles from the automobile at the places where they were to be delivered to the dealers, and when Bresler arrived at the corner where plaintiff was injured, he slowed down the automobile so that Schrell could throw the bundle from the automobile to the sidewalk. The act of Schrell was the act of Bresler. [James v. Muehlebach,
Defendant assigns error upon the giving of plaintiff's instruction No. 1, on the ground that it is broader than the petition. Defendant says that the petition alleges that the bundle in question was thrown by defendant's servants and agents, whereas the instruction does not require the jury to find that Schrell was either a servant or an agent of defendant. This assignment is extremely technical. The instruction requires the jury to *Page 75 find that Bresler was the servant of defendant and that the bundle was thrown by Schrell under circumstances whereby his negligent act became the act of Bresler. Clearly the allegation of the petition that the servants of defendant committed the tortious act is broad enough to cover the act of Schrell, for the act of Schrell was the act of the servant Bresler.
Defendant contends further that the instruction is broader than the pleadings and the proof in that it permits the jury to predicate liability upon the negligent driving of the automobile, whereas the petition does not allege and the evidence does not show that the automobile was driven in a negligent manner. The instruction does not predicate liability upon the negligent driving of the automobile. It does submit the question of negligence in permitting the automobile to be in motion at the time the bundle was thrown. But this is covered by the allegation that the bundle was negligently thrown while the automobile was in motion.
Defendant further objects that the instruction is faulty in that it permits the jury to find for plaintiff if Bresler in performing his work was acting in the scope of his employment for defendant, though the jury may have found that the employment of Bresler was that of an independent contractor. The objection is not well taken. The instruction distinctly requires the jury to find that Bresler was subject to the control and orders of defendant with reference to the means and manner of doing his work.
Defendant further complains of the instruction for that it fails to limit the amount of damages recoverable to the amount prayed for in the petition. The amount of damages awarded by the jury was very much less than the amount prayed for. Manifestly there is no merit in this complaint.
Defendant insists that the court committed error in permitting plaintiff's counsel to cross-examine the witness Bresler. The witness was an employee of defendant, *Page 76 and he exhibited considerable hostility to the plaintiff in giving his testimony. We rule that the court did not abuse its discretion in permitting him to be cross-examined.
We have examined the evidence relating to the plaintiff's injury, and conclude that the amount of the damages awarded him by the jury is not such that this court ought to interfere with the award for excessiveness.
The Commissioner recommends that the judgment of the circuit court be affirmed.
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