The plaintiff brings this action of tort to recover damages for personal injuries sustained while riding in an automobile owned and operated by the defendant. The accident occurred in Lebanon, Connecticut, on July 3, 1947. The plaintiff had a verdict. The questions for deci *26 sion arise out of the defendant’s exceptions to the denial of his motion for a directed verdict and to a portion of the judge’s charge.
The defendant’s answer alleges, in part, that he was an insured person under the workmen’s compensation act. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152. See
Pell
v.
New Bedford Gas & Edison Light Co.
The following is a summary of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff: The plaintiff, a woman seventy-one years of age, was a friend of one Mrs. Saffer, a domestic servant employed by the defendant. On two occasions at the defendant’s home in Springfield the plaintiff had assisted Mrs. Saffer to “clean up after dinner” so that she could “get out early.” On one of these occasions, when asked by the defendant’s wife if she owed her anything for what she had done, the plaintiff stated that nothing was due. Whereupon the defendant’s wife handed the plaintiff $1 so that she and Mrs. Saffer could go to the “movies.” Sometime in June, 1947, Mrs. Saffer learned that the defendant and his family were going to spend the summer in Stonington, Connecticut, and she informed the plaintiff of this. Because they were friendly and liked to be together, *27 they discussed the possibility of the plaintiff coming to Stonington to assist Mrs. Saffer for a period of two weeks commencing on July 3. The plaintiff told Mrs. Saffer that she would be willing to go. At different times Mrs. Saffer informed the defendant’s wife of conversations she had had with the plaintiff relative to the latter’s coming to Stoning-ton, and this information was conveyed to the defendant by his wife. Shortly prior to July 3 the plaintiff received a telephone call from the defendant who asked her if she was going to Stonington. The plaintiff told him that she was and the defendant said he would call for her on the afternoon of July 3. In accordance with this arrangement the defendant called for the plaintiff and the accident occurred while she was being transported to Stonington in the defendant’s automobile.
The plaintiff testified that she was going to Stonington “to have a good time with her friend, Mrs. Saffer”; that Mrs. Carlisle (the defendant’s wife) “did not hire her to go down there”; that she was going to help Mrs. Saffer; and that she never discussed employment with either the defendant or his wife. The plaintiff also testified that when she left Springfield for Connecticut with the defendant she did not have any thought of work or pay, “but was merely intent on getting away from home.” In answer to a question whether she expected to be paid for her work in Stoning-ton she replied that “she did and she didn’t.” When asked if she expected to work while she was in Stonington the plaintiff answered, “I never go anywhere, visiting . . . unless I work.” At one point in her testimony she said, “Mrs. Carlisle probably would have paid me.”
The defendant testified that he paid all the household bills but left all matters relating to the hiring of help to his wife. The defendant’s wife testified that the plaintiff “was never an employee of mine.”
1. With respect to the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict the parties are agreed that the ■ only question presented is whether the evidence establishes as matter of law that the plaintiff at the time of the accident was an “em
*28
ployee” of the defendant as that word is used in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152. Section 1 (4) defines “Employee” as including “every person in the service of another under any contract of hire, express or implied, oral or written . . ..” It is familiar law that “a verdict will not be directed for a party unless the evidence when construed most favorably to the opposite party would not warrant a contrary verdict, or unless evidence by which such opposite party is bound would make impossible a verdict in his favor.”
Salem Trust Co.
v.
Deery,
2. The defendant’s other exception relates to a portion of the charge. The judge,.subject to the defendant’s exception, charged the jury in part as follows: “Gentlemen: this is the plaintiff’s request number seven: ‘As a matter of law the plaintiff never entered into an express contract of hire with the defendant so as to become an employee within the meaning of the word “Employee” . . . in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 1, as amended.’ That request concerns an express contract, not an implied contract.”
The defendant contends that this instruction was erroneous for the reason that there was some evidence of an express contract. The evidence relied on by the defendant in support of his contention is that the defendant left the matter of hiring domestic help to his wife; that his *29 wife informed Mrs. Saffer that there would be extra guests at Stonington “over the Fourth of July”; that as a result of this information Mrs. Saffer had a conversation with the defendant’s wife regarding some extra help; that following this conversation Mrs. Saffer asked the plaintiff to come to Stonington to help her and the plaintiff agreed to come; that Mrs. Saffer told the plaintiff that “she would possibly get as much as she . . . [Mrs. Saffer] received for pay”; that Mrs. Saffer told the plaintiff that she would be in Stonington about two weeks; that the defendant agreed to furnish transportation for the plaintiff; that the substance of each conversation between Mrs. Saffer and the plaintiff was conveyed to the defendant’s wife; and that on the day of the accident the defendant called for the plaintiff and transported her to Connecticut in his automobile.
We are of opinion that the foregoing evidence fails to show that the defendant or persons authorized to act on his behalf entered into an express contract with the plaintiff. The word “express” as applied to a contract in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 1 (4), signifies a contract where the terms are expressly stated in contradistinction to an implied contract where an agreement is inferred from the conduct of the parties and from the attendant circumstances. See
W. A. Snow Iron Works, Inc.
v.
Chadwick,
Exceptions overruled.
