The plaintiff, a roofer and sheet metal worker, made a contract with the defendant to repair the gutters on the front piazzas of a three-flat apartment house belonging to the defendant who lived in the second floor flat. In searching for some tins of paint which he had left on one of the piazzas to remain till needed in his work, but which had disappeared, he went to the defendant’s flat to inquire about
The plaintiff’s action for damages was tried without a jury. The evidence material to the exceptions came solely from the plaintiff and his physician. Its substance has been stated. The defendant offered no evidence, but made eight requests for rulings. The judge filed the following “Findings and Rulings.” “1. The plaintiff was an independent contractor hired by the defendant to repair the roofs of the piazzas on the second and third stories of the defendant’s building. The accident and resulting injuries to the plaintiff are not attributable to the risks incident to his employment, but to an extraneous hazard caused by the defendant’s act in removing, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, certain cans of paint belonging to the plaintiff to a closet in the cellar of the building. 2. In the course of his employment prior to the accident the plaintiff had not entered the
The defendant claimed exceptions to the findings and rulings, and to the refusals to rule as requested.
The defendant was not injured in that the judge directed that a verdict for the plaintiff be entered instead of himself making a finding for the plaintiff. In substance, the judge found for the plaintiff in damages assessed at $600.
Both parties claimed that the plaintiff was an independent contractor. He was employed at a round sum to do a specified work and to supply the materials needed. There was nothing to indicate that the defendant retained or assumed any control of the work or its method of accomplishment. This justified a finding that the plaintiff was an independent contractor. See Brackett v. Lubke, 4 Allen, 138. The fifth request was given, in substance. There was no evidence of wanton and wilful negligence by any one. The eighth request manifestly was refused because, upon the findings, it was immaterial.
The first, fourth, sixth, and seventh requests were inapplicable and immaterial in view of the findings of fact made by the judge that the wife, in directing and requesting the plaintiff to go and get this paint from the cellar, was acting as agent for her husband, and that the husband was negligent in failing to warn the plaintiff of the hole; and his ruling of law that the plaintiff had the status of an invitee. The difficult question in the case is, whether there is evidence to justify these findings and the ruling.
Unless the wife was acting as agent for her husband, the defendant was prejudiced by.the refusal to rule as requested and by the ruling made. The existence of the marriage relation by itself is not enough to establish an agency. Harvey v. Squire, 217 Mass. 411. See Nelson v. Garey, 114 Mass. 418. There were, however, other facts to be considered: the removal of the paint to the cellar; the possession of the key to the cellar by the wife; her knowledge of the whereabouts of the paint in the cellar; the conversation between the husband and wife when she reported what had happened; taken with the failure of the defendant to limit the testimony given, or to explain what had been done or not done in the matter, were enough to justify an inference that the wife had been made the agent of the husband in attending to the return of the paint if sought for in his absence, or in requesting the plaintiff to go get it.
There was evidence in the conversation to show that the defendant knew of the hole, and regarded it as a danger.
The plaintiff could be found to be the invitee of the defendant.
Exceptions overruled.