48 Ga. App. 365 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
1. Where a contract between an oil company and the operator of a service station, which provides that the operator "shall act as retail agent” for the oil company for .the purpose of selling at retail, at prices fixed by the company, products furnished him by the company in quantity, kind, and variety which in the judgment of the company the business of the service station warrants, that he shall sell the company’s products on such terms only as the company may authorize, his compensation to be a stipulated commission upon the sales, that he shall account, to ffhe company.out'of the monies due him under the contract for all
2. The relationship between the parties to a contract is determinable by the contract and the rights established thereunder. Where a contract of employment gives to the employer the right to control the manner, means, and methods by which the employee performs the duties required of him' under the contract, the rela
3. In a suit to recover damages for an injury to the plaintiff arising from an explosion of oil at a service station, alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence, where the defendant pleaded in abatement of the suit that the relationship between the parties was that of master and servant, and that the injury was compensable under the workmen’s compensation act and the plaintiff had no right of recovery at common law, and where it appeared, without contradiction, from the evidence adduced upon the trial of the issue formed by the plea in abatement, that the plaintiff operated the service station for the defendant under a contract by which the plaintiff was the servant of the defendant, and from evidence offered by the plaintiff, which was excluded over objection, that the defendant did not exercise any right of control -over the manner, means, and method by which the plaintiff conducted the business in operating the service station, did not pay the plaintiff any wages, or pay him any money for his services, but that the plaintiff paid the defendant, at a price less than the retail price to customers, for all gas which the defendant delivered to him, and “resold” it to the public, the inference was demanded as a matter of law that the relationship between the parties was that of master and servant, as established by the contract.
4. Since it was conceded that the only issue for determination was whether the evidence demanded a finding that the relationship between the parties was that of master and servant, and that otherwise the injury sued for was, as against the defendant, compensable under the workmen’s compensation act, the court did not err in excluding the evidence objected to and in directing a verdict for
Judgment affirmed.-