218 N.W. 781 | Mich. | 1928
John Dennis owned an auto truck. The Sinclair Lumber Fuel Company employed him and his truck steadily for 16 weeks in delivering coal and building material at an agreed compensation per ton of coal and load of material. Mr. Dennis, in returning to the lumber yard from making a delivery, was killed at a railroad crossing. The department of labor and industry held that Dennis was an employee *91 of the lumber company and awarded compensation to his widow. Defendants denied liability, claiming Dennis was an independent contractor, was not an employee, and was not killed in an accident arising out of and in the course of employment. We issued our writ of certiorari on the application of defendants. Plaintiff filed two motions to dismiss the writ. Our disposition of the case renders decision of the motions unnecessary.
This is not a pioneer case. We have many times. considered the principal point involved, and, while not always in agreement, the majority opinions have fully settled the rule.
The Michigan workmen's compensation statute applies to employer and employee in the sense of such relation at common law, and not at all to the relation of an independent contractor to a job or jobs. An abstract definition of what constitutes an independent contractor is useful in the test of whether the relation in a case is such or that of an employee, but is seldom decisive, for each case has its own facts and the facts call for applicable law.
Mr. Dennis was hired, with use of his truck, to deliver coal in retail quantities to customers of the lumber and fuel company. His every act was under direction and control of the company. The coal for delivery was selected by the company, weighed under its supervision, billed by the company, and delivered in each instance under its immediate direction, and, if not paid for before or at delivery, was brought back, and, if paid for on delivery, the money was brought to the company. The same was true of building material. Mr. Dennis worked steadily for the company for 16 weeks and was paid at weekly intervals an average of about $42. At the time he was injured he was returning to the yard from making a delivery of building material. Mr. Dennis was in the course of his *92 employment in returning to the place of his employer, even though not at the time of the accident pursuing the most direct route; there being some evidence showing road conditions justifying his course and nothing to show he was about any private affair.
An apt case illustrative of the common-law distinction between an independent contractor and an employee, under circumstances similar to those in the case at bar, isWaters v. Pioneer Fuel Co.,
This court has held that the test of the relationship is the right to control, whether in fact exercised or not.Tuttle v. Embury-Martin Lumber Co.,
Counsel for defendants cite Norton v. Day Coal Co.,
The claimed incompetent testimony can all be stricken out and still leave ample proof supporting the findings of the commission. Such being the case, we will not spend time in determining whether it should have been excluded.
The award is affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.
FEAD, C.J., and NORTH, FELLOWS, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred.