The question involved in this case is whether or not the appellant, Billy Elder, a newspaper delivery boy on a certain designated route, was a- servant of the Express Publishing Company and covered by Workmen’s Compensation Insurance. It was the contention of Aetna Casualty & Surety Company, the insurance carrier for the publishing company, that appellant was an independent contractor. The trial court accepted this theory and instructed a verdict for the insurance company. Billy Elder, a minor, by his next friend, brings the case here.
Aрpellant suffered a broken leg when an automobile came around a street corner and collided with the motor bike upon which he was riding. It is urged that even if Billy Elder be considered a servant of the publishing company, there is no evidence that he was acting within the scope of his employment at the time he was injured. In this connection, we have examined the testimony of appellant as contained in the statement of facts, and come to the conclusion that such testimony if credited by a jury would support a finding that Billy Elder was acting within thе scope of his employment when injured. Under the evidence, this was an issue upon which the jury could have found either way and the trial court’s action in giving the peremptory instruction must find its support in the premise that appellant was an independent contractor and nоt the servant of the publishing company.
In this case an attempt was made to define the relationship between the publishing company and appellant by means of a written instrument which contained the ■following provisions:
“1. The publisher agrees to sell to the carrier and the carrier agrees to buy newspapers for sale to subscribers on Route No. D-3 in San Antonio or vicinity effective 6-15-48. The prices and terms shall be such as are fixed by the publisher from time to time.
“2. No interest in the route is sold to the carrier.
"3. The carrier agrees to pay рublisher at its office in San Antonio, Texas, on or before the 5th and 20th of each month for ■all copies purchased by carrier during the preceding period.
“4. Carrier agrees to furnish to the publisher whenever requested a written list giving the name and address of each subscriber in rеgular order in which papers are delivered on the route and shall not give any list of subscribers to any other person.
“5. The carrier shall furnish his own equipment and means of conveyance and they shall be under his own exclusive charge and control and the publisher shall havе no interest therein.
“6. In case the carrier utilizes the services of others, then he shall keep a record of his employees and fully comply with the Social Securities Act and the State Unemployment Insurance Act and all other laws and City Ordinances.
. “7. It is agreed, that the sole relationship between the parties is the sale of said papers by the publisher to the carrier and that no other relationship exists except that of seller and purchaser, and the carrier shall not have authority to represent or act for thе publisher either as agent or employee.
“8. This contract may be terminated at any time by either party without any prior notice. Upon such termination the carrier shall deliver to publisher all paid-in-advance subscriptions (which publisher will then undertake to fulfill for carriеr) and the names and addresses of all subscribers and expiration of their subscriptions and all accounts between publisher and carrier shall be immediately paid.”
This agreement on its face purports to be one between principals. The relationship of master and servant is not created by the contract, and under it Billy Elder occupied the position of an independent contractor in relation to the publishing company.
. Appellant relies primarily upon evidence of control exercised by the district sales manаger over appellant’s actions to establish the relationship of master and servant, and suggests that the written contract was a subterfuge on the part of the publishing company to avoid carrying compensation coverage for its route carriers, and at thе same time retain and possess the right to control them as to the detailed manner in which they carry out their work.
In our opinion, there is no- evidence that the contract was a subterfuge, nor that it had ever been repudiated by appellant or the publisher. It seems undisрuted that as to essentials the contract controlled the actions of the parties. Billy Elder received his monetary compensation or profit from his paper delivering activities in accordance with the terms of the contract, and furnished his own means of сonveyance. The methods and means employed by him in delivering the papers on his route were
We are of the opinion that the Texas authorities are against appellant’s position and support the trial court’s action in giving a peremptory instruction. In Carter Publications v. Davis, Tex.Civ.App.,
Carter Publications v. Davis was later cited with approval by the Supreme Court in Texas Co. v. Wheat,
While, as above pointed out, newsboys or route delivery boys may be еither independent contractors or servants, depending upon the particular agreement they have with the publisher, the independent contractor status seems to- be the usual -position held by them. Particularly is this true when the issue is one of tort liability under the doctrine of respondeat superior, or one -of coverage under Workmen’s Compensation Acts. This circumstance may be in part explained by the practical impossibility of a publisher’s maintaining an.effective control over newsboys and route men. Workmen’s Compensation Acts, at least in part, grew out of the liability of the master for negligent injuries to his servants. One of the more common bases for liability was the failure of the master to provide a safe place in which the servant co-uld do his work. The workman’s remedy by an action for negligеnce became more illusive than real with the development of the factory system, coupled with no- corresponding modification of the common law defenses of contributory negligence, the fellow servant rule and the doctrine of assumed risk. Under the Texas Wоrkmen’s Compensation Law, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Art. 8306 et seq., the employer failing to provide compensation insurance is deprived of these defenses and the workman who elects to retain his common law right to sue for negligence (in lieu of Workmen’s Compensation benefits) takеs such right subject
We make the above observations in deference to the earnest and well-prepared arguments presented by appellant in support of a liberal construction of a remedial statute. We believe that in the matters and considerations above stated a distinction may be found between Workmen’s Compensation cases and those arising under acts having an admittedly broader social basis, such as unemployment insurance acts, the federаl Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 301 et seq., and the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq. In the case of National Labor Relations Board v. Hearst Publications,
While many out of state cases, apparently conflicting, may be reconciled on the facts, a majority and a minority rule nevertheless seems discernible. The majority rule is in accord with Carter Publications, Inc., v. Davis, Tex.Civ.App., 68 S.W.2d 640, wr. ref. Authorities from other jurisdictions seemingly,. in accord and some citing the’Davis case are: Ross v. Post Pub. Co.,
Some cases, not necessarily in conflict with those above cited because of differing fact situations, but holding newsboys or route delivery boys to be servants are: Hampton v. Macon News Printing Co.,
For the reasons stated, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
