This appeal involves a worker’s compensation claim. Le-vern Melvin Eaddy died when he accidentally drove a truck off a mountain road. Appellant A. J. Metier Hauling & Rigging Company leased the truck Eaddy was driving from its employer, Coward Farm Center, Inc., to transport a load of steel. Respondent Mae Bell Melvin, the administratrix of Eaddy’s estate, filed this claim with the Industrial Commission. A single commissioner granted worker’s compensation benefits based on the lent employee doctrine. His decision was upheld by the full Commission and affirmed by the circuit court. We affirm.
S. C. Code Ann. Section 1-23-380(g)(5) (1976 & Supp. 1983) establishes courts can reverse or modify administrative decisions if the findings are “[cjlearly erroneous in view of the ... substantial evidence on the whole record.” This standard of judicial review applies to appeals from the Industrial Commission.
Lark v. Bi-Lo,
276 S. C. 130,
The record shows Coward leased its employee Eaddy and a truck to Metier to transport steel from Georgetown, South Carolina, to Scottsdale, Pennsylvania. Coward was to receive seventy-five percent of the total transportation charges and pay Eaddy; Metier was to receive twenty-five percent. Since Coward’s trucks are not licensed to operate in interstate commerce, the load was being transported under Metier’s Interstate Commerce Commission license. Metier exercised control over Eaddy during the period of the lease and could terminate him; Eaddy received his orders specifying destination and time of arrival from Metier.
As a general rule, if an employer lends his employee to a second employer, and if the employee is under the control of the second employer, the employee is considered employed by the second employer.
Brownlee v. Charleston Motor Express Co., Inc.,
189 S. C. 204,
The first part of the
DeBerry
test is satisfied if the lent employee consents to the special employment relationship.
Feldmann v. Dot Delivery Service,
On the record before it, the Commission could reasonably find Eaddy was a lent employee of Metier. Therefore, the judgment of the circuit court is correct.
Affirmed.
