Myron J. Skeels met his death while at work in cutting timber for wood pulp upon premises owned by the Paul Smith’s Hotel Company, in the town of Brighton, Franklin county, on the 14th day of November, 1918, and the question necessary to the disposition of this appeal is whether he was an employee of that corporation at the time of his death.
On the 20th day of November, 1918, the claimant wrote a letter to the State Industrial Commission in which she says: “ Enclosed find notice of death of my husband who was killed working in the lumber woods for Paul Amell.” On the twenty-ninth day of November of the same year the claimant verified her formal claim, in which she stated that she made claim for compensation for “ the death of Myron J. Skeels, who died on the 14th day of November, 1918, in the employ of Paul Amell, of Lake Clear, N. Y.” On the thirtieth day of November of the same year the claimant again wrote the State Industrial Commission saying that “ my husband was cutting wood by the cord as all the men are for Mr. Amell, and did not have a contract to cut any amount, and he worked for Mr. Amell by the day at different times. Mr. Amell is getting the wood out for Paul Smith’s Hotel Co.,” etc. On the fourth of December following Mr. Amell, writing to the State Industrial Commission in reference to this claim, says: “ I did not have a written contract with Skeels, but had a verbal contract at a certain price per cord and his partners William Buckley and William Ryan have since Skeels’ death continued work by the cord,” and the letter closes with a declaration that “ I was in no sense his employer, as he was an independent contractor.” On the twenty-eighth of December of the same year the Paul Smith’s Hotel Company wrote the State Industrial Commission saying that “ Paul Amell is a pulpwood contractor, that has a verbal contract with this company to deliver pulpwood loaded on the cars at a certain price per cord, so that he is not on our payroll. * * * Amell has no authority to hire help for
Here we find the first subtle suggestion of Smith’s relation to the death of Skeels. It is to be noted, however, that it makes no mention of the Paul Smith’s Hotel Company, which is a domestic corporation having a legal entity entirely distinct and apart from the individuals who compose it, and the record shows two Paul Smiths, one designated as “ Paul Smith, Jr.,” and the other merely as Paul Smith, and it must be obvious that the record up to this time does not disclose any contractual relations whatever between the Paul Smith’s Hotel Company and the decedent, and without such a relationship there is no foundation for the operation of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. (Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 2, clause 1, as amd. by Laws of 1917, chap. 705; Id. § 3, subds. 3,4, 5, 6, 7, as amd. by Laws of 1917, chap. 705; Id. § 10; Palmer v. Van Santvoord,
No evidence is produced that Paul Smith was the principal of Mr. Amell; the uncontradicted testimony is that Mr. Amell had a verbal contract for cutting the pulpwood timber on the hotel property tract at a given price per cord, and that Owens was the man who had charge of measuring the wood as it was cut, and of seeing to it generally that Amell performed the conditions of the contract. There is not a particle of evidence that Owens had any control over Skeels, or that Amell had any control over the manner in which Skeels performed his work, except to confine him to a particular piece of land. Skeels was, by all the evidence, engaged in a joint enterprise with two other men in the cutting of pulpwood under a subcontract with' Amell, and the fact that he entered into an agreement which did not entitle him to compensation from Amell, or that Amell was too poor to pay compensation, does not warrant holding" the Paul Smith’s Hotel Company for the amount of this award. The only foundation on which an award can lawfully be made against the Paul Smith’s Hotel Company is evidence that Skeels was an employee of that corporation, and thére is no evidence of this. The testimony of the claimant that she always supposed her husband worked for Mr. Smith clearly does not reach the dignity of a scintilla of evidence that the Paul Smith’s Hotel Company employed the decedent, and a mere scintilla of evidence is not sufficient upon a jurisdictional question, such as is here involved. (Matter of Case,
The award appealed from should be reversed and the claim dismissed.
All concur.
Award appealed from reversed and claim dismissed.
