42 S.E.2d 71 | N.C. | 1947
The petition to rehear the appeal and to reconsider the decision heretofore rendered on procedural grounds, affirming the judgment below, reported ante, 65,
The plaintiffs' claim for compensation, under the Workmen's Compensation Act for the death of James F. Brown, alleged to have been *301 due to an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by the defendant Motor Lines, was allowed by the Industrial Commission, and approved and affirmed by the court below, upon the following findings of fact by the Industrial Commission:
"That L. H. Bottoms (Truck Lines) is engaged in the trucking business with its principal office and place of business in High Point, North Carolina, and holds itself out to the public to haul all kinds of freight, merchandise, supplies and equipment usually and customarily hauled by automotive truck throughout this state and other states; and in said capacity the said L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines has been authorized to do such hauling in interstate commerce by the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States, and for said purpose has been assigned a certain license plate and number to be used upon its trucks when so engaged in transporting freight for hire in interstate commerce.
"That on or about the 14th day of March 1944, the defendant, L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines, had more freight accumulated in its warehouse than it had trucks of its own to carry; and in order to facilitate the delivery of this freight to its customers, L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines contacted the deceased, James F. Brown, who lived in the vicinity and owned a truck of his own and did local hauling for himself and other people of freight and other commodities. The deceased Brown did not have a license from the Interstate Commerce Commission that would permit him to haul the kind of freight that Bottoms wished to have hauled in interstate commerce; therefore, the said L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines and the said James F. Brown, deceased, entered into an agreement in writing, which is offered in evidence, by the terms of which agreement the said Brown leased his truck to the defendant Bottoms upon the terms and conditions as set out in said lease, and the said Bottoms was to furnish and supply to said truck leased from Brown with an interstate commerce license that would permit said truck to transport merchandise in interstate commerce and especially to carry the load in question from High Point in the State of North Carolina to the City of Norfolk in the State of Virginia. Said agreement was entered into and the truck so owned by J. F. Brown and so leased to L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines was on or about March 13th loaded by the employees of the L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines at its warehouse in High Point, North Carolina, with a load of merchandise in transit and being handled by the defendant Bottoms and consigned to Norfolk, Virginia.
"That the deceased, James F. Brown, operating said truck so leased, left High Point on the morning of March 14, 1944, and was proceeding on the usual and customary route from High Point, North Carolina, to Norfolk, Virginia, to unload said merchandise under the provisions of said lease; and while en route to Norfolk (in Virginia), the truck in which the said Brown was riding and operating for the said L. H. Bottoms *302 Truck Lines collided with another truck upon the highway and the said Brown was killed.
"The Commissioner finds as a matter of law that when the deceased, Brown, leased his equipment to L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines that the control of said equipment for the purpose of hauling said load from High Point, North Carolina, to Norfolk, Virginia, passed out of the control of the deceased, J. F. Brown, and that the control of said equipment was solely and exclusively in the possession of the defendant Bottoms; and that any person operating said truck after the execution of said lease was an employee of the defendant, L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines, at the time of his death, and that the injury resulting in his death was due to an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment."
The terms of the lease agreement referred to are as follows:
"1. It is agreed L. H. Bottoms Truck Lines, leases from Jas. F. Brown, Lessor, of Greensboro, the following described Motor Vehicle to be used by said lessee in its interstate service to transport merchandise from High Point, N.C. to Norfolk, Va., and on or about the date of this agreement (Description of Vehicle):
"2. Upon arrival of this vehicle at the destination terminal named in the preceding paragraph the lessee will immediately upon discharge of its lading deliver said vehicle into the possession of the lessor or its agent at the point of discharge of lading.
"3. The lessor agrees to pay all maintenance and all operating expenses of the said motor vehicle while in the use of the lessee. The lessor guarantees said motor vehicle against any defects, latent or otherwise, as of the date hereof, and warrants the said motor vehicle fully meets the requirements of all applicable Federal and state laws, rules or regulations. The lessee shall not be liable for any damage or depreciation that may occur to said motor vehicle while in its possession under this lease.
"4. The lessor further agrees to indemnify and save harmless the lessee against any claim arising from the operation of the vehicle or vehicles named in paragraph (1) thereof, and against any claim for loss or damage to any shipment or shipments being transported in said vehicle or vehicles.
"5. The lessee will pay to the lessor the sum of $40,00, computed at the rate of per load cents per (CWT) (or mile) for a load of......... pounds, less $........ (Driver's wages), for the use of the motor vehicle in the service described in paragraphs one and two hereof.
"6. The lessee assigns and affixes to said vehicle for the duration of this lease, Interstate Commerce Commission identification plates number, as shown in paragraph (1), which must be removed at the aforementioned destination terminal and remain only in the possession of the *303 lessee, before full payment of the rental sum, as provided for herein, is made."
The facts found are not controverted. The only question now presented is whether, as a matter of law, these facts are sufficient to support the conclusion of the Industrial Commission and the judgment of the Superior Court based thereon. This presents a question appropriate for appellate review. Wood v. Miller,
It is the contention of the defendants that the terms of the contract whereby Brown's truck was leased to the defendants for the transportation of goods for them to Norfolk, Virginia, were sufficient to establish conclusively that the relationship of Brown to the defendants and to the transaction was that of an independent contractor. Defendants urge that there is no other possible interpretation of the contract.
What constitutes one an independent contractor is fully set out in Hayesv. Elon College,
The defendants cite in support of their contention the case of GreyvanLines v. Harrison, decided in 1944 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, in which it was held that the relationship of employer and employee did not exist between the Trucking Company and the owners of trucks with whom the company contracted for the transportation of goods or those hired by the truck owners to assist in operating the trucks. The only question presented in that case was the power of the Collector of Internal Revenue to collect taxes and penalties as assessed under Federal Social Security Laws against the company upon payments made to truckers operating under contracts similar to that in the case at bar. The District Court held the Company not liable for the tax on these payments. The decision does not seem to have been reviewed by an appellate court.
However, we are not disposed to hold the conclusion reached by the Judge in the Greyvan case as determinative of the question presented in the case at bar.
Here the defendant Bottoms Truck Lines was a motor carrier of goods in interstate commerce, operating under authority of a certificate or license issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission. Transportation *304 in interstate commerce by an interstate motor carrier is subject to the applicable provisions of the Federal statutes governing such carriage, and the rules, regulations and requirements of the Interstate Commerce Commission. 49 U.S.C.A., secs. 301, et seq. Under the Federal statute the defendant was required to attach to each vehicle used in such transportation the identification or license plates prescribed for it by the Commission (49 U.S.C.A., sec. 324). In order to augment its equipment for the transportation of goods, the defendant obtained by contract the use of Brown's owner-driven truck to be added to its own fleet of trucks for the transportation of certain goods from High Point, North Carolina, to Norfolk, Virginia, and in the contract it was stipulated, in accordance with the requirements of the statute and the regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission, that the license plates issued by the Commission to the defendant Truck Lines for its own trucks must be attached to and used by the Brown truck, thus identifying the truck as being used by the named defendant under its franchise. The Brown truck could not have been driven over the highways to Virginia in interstate commerce without being thus identified. It could not have been used independently or in any other way for this interstate transportation. The truck for the period of transportation was in the possession of defendant Truck Lines, and only at the end of the journey was it to be delivered back to the lessor as provided in section 2 of the contract. The operation of the truck was in law under the supervision and control of the interstate franchise carrier and could be lawfully operated only by those standing in the relationship of employees to the authorized carrier. Brown had no franchise right independent of the defendant. The insurance on the cargo in the Brown truck was carried by the defendant. As a witness for the defendants testified, "He (Brown) had no right to transport anything we had turned over to him," nor was he at liberty to pick up other loads along the route to Norfolk. The defendant Motor Lines could not contract for the use of a truck or employ an independent truck owner not a holder of certificate or permit from the Interstate Commerce Commission (49 U.S.C.A., sec. 311), except under its own license plates, and by virtue of its franchise.
The transportation of goods in interstate commerce by motor vehicles was required to be under the rules and regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the Brown truck could only have been used in such transportation by the defendant franchise carrier as one of its fleet of trucks under its license plates. Hence it would seem to follow that control of the operation for the period of the lease was given to the licensed carrier, and that the owner-driven truck was in contemplation of law in its employ and the driver for the trip stood on the relationship of its employee, as found by the Industrial Commission. *305
We think the applicable rule, under the facts here presented, is that the lease or contract by which the equipment of the authorized interstate carrier was augmented, must be interpreted as carrying the necessary implication that possession and control of the added vehicle was, for the trip, vested in the authorized operator.
This conclusion is in accord with well considered decisions in other jurisdictions.
In Steffens v. Continental Freight Forwarders Co.,
The use of the Brown truck in the case at bar was presumed to have been contracted for in contemplation of and subject to the pertinent provisions of the Federal statutes and the regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission in relation thereto then in force.
A case similar in material respects to the case at bar is Hodges v.Johnson,
In Restatement Law of Torts, the rule is stated as follows: "Sec. 428. Contractor's negligence in doing work which cannot be lawfully done except under a franchise granted to his employer. An individual or a corporation carrying on an activity which can be lawfully carried on only under a franchise granted by public authority and which involves risk of harm to others, is subject to liability for bodily harm caused to such others by the negligence of a contractor employed to do work in carrying on the activity."
In Kimble v. Wilson,
The provision in the contract in the case at bar whereby the lessor Brown agreed to indemnify and save harmless the lessee from any claim arising from the operation of the vehicle may not be held to relieve the defendant, if as a matter of law under the facts found liability under the Workmen's Compensation Act accrued, as provided by the statute. G.S.,
The act of the defendant in accord with the provisions of the lease in placing its own license plates on Brown's truck under the circumstances disclosed, thus giving it the status and holding it out as its own vehicle for the purposes of this trip, a procedure which alone authorized its operation, must be regarded as an assumption of such control as would defeat the plea of non-liability for injury to the driver on the ground of independent contractor. Control of the employer must be completely surrendered to relieve liability. Leonard v. Transfer Co.,
We conclude that the judgment of the Superior Court should be affirmed, and the petition dismissed.