51 S.E.2d 889 | N.C. | 1949
BARNHILL, J., dissents. Claim by dependents of William Lee Cooper under Workmen's Compensation Act for compensation for fatal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by defendant Colonial Ice Co.
The facts found by the Industrial Commission, and upon which it based an award may be summarized as follows:
Ten years before his death William Lee Cooper entered into an oral arrangement with Colonial Ice Co. for the sale and delivery of ice in specified territory in Wilson. Defendant agreed to furnish him a horse and wagon, and all equipment used in connection with retail delivery of ice. The name of the Colonial Ice Co. was on the wagon. According *44 to this arrangement each morning during the season Cooper was to obtain a load of ice at defendant's plant and was charged $1.20 for each block which he was to sell at the Company's regular retail price of $1.80. Cooper was to begin work at 7 a.m. and quit before dark. Whenever orders were received by the defendant for ice to be delivered in the territory served by Cooper these orders were turned over to Cooper to make delivery, and defendant would deliver additional ice to his wagon when requested. Each day when Cooper returned from selling ice, he paid the Ice Company at the specified rate and was credited with ice unsold. The defendant had right to terminate the agreement at any time or discharge him if work unsatisfactory. A similar arrangement applied to retail sale of coal. At times Cooper was on the defendant's pay roll for other work at the plant. The Industrial Commission found his hours of work, territory, and other details concerning the sale and delivery of ice were supervised by defendant, and that the arrangement for purchase and payment of ice was in effect a method of calculating his wages and obtaining payment for ice delivered by him. Cooper kept the horse and wagon in defendant's plant and he fed the horse on materials furnished by defendant. Defendant's manager testified, "During the winter months of '46 and '47 he was on the payroll." Defendant did not allow him to haul on the wagon more than six blocks of ice at the time. Cooper sold ice ticket books and turned the money over to defendant, thereafter accepting tickets as cash. In October, 1947, while Cooper was engaged under this arrangement in delivering ice, he was struck by a motortruck and injured, and died in consequence. In defendant's form report of the injury (employer's report of accident to employee) transmitted to the Industrial Commission 16 October, 1947, the Colonial Ice Co. was named as "employer" and "ice delivery" was put down as Cooper's "regular occupation." In response to the question, "How long employed by you" defendant wrote, "10 years." "Piece or time work?" "Piece." . . . 10 hours per day, 6 days per week, average weekly earnings $40.
The Industrial Commission found that Cooper's fatal injury was by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by defendant Ice Company, and awarded compensation in accord with the statute. On appeal by the defendants to the Superior Court the action of the Industrial Commission was in all respects affirmed, and defendants appealed to this Court.
The defendants denied liability on the ground that the decedent William Lee Cooper, at the time of his injury, was not an *45
employee of the defendant Colonial Ice Co. within the meaning of the statute (G.S.
In order to implement the remedial purposes of the Workmen's Compensation Act the Industrial Commission is constituted the fact-finding body, and the statute declares that the findings of this Commission shall be "conclusive and binding as to all questions of fact." G.S.
It is well settled as a general rule that an independent contractor is one who exercises an independent employment and contracts to do certain work according to his own judgment and method, without being subject to his employer except as to the results of his work. Perley v. Paving Co., supra; Greer v. Construction Co.,
An examination of the record in the case at bar in the light of these decisions leads to the conclusion that the findings of fact of the Industrial Commission have their inception in the evidence adduced at the *46
hearing and are based thereon, and that the inferences of fact deducible therefrom support the award in favor of claimants. Hence, we think the judgment of the Superior Court in affirmance should not be disturbed. In Rewis v. Ins. Co.,
We think the record discloses facts sufficient to sustain the award. DeVine v. Steel Co.,
Defendants rely on Creswell v. Pub. Co.,
The judgment sustaining the award of the Industrial Commission is
Affirmed.
BARNHILL J., dissents.