16 Cal. App. 2d 733 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1936
The question here is whether an award made by respondent commission against petitioner and in favor of one Jerry Atwood should be annulled.
Atwood, on June 12, 1935, fell from a truck moving along the highway in the neighborhood of Indio and suffered broken bones and a brain concussion. The referee of the Industrial Accident Commission who heard the case found that at the time of the accident Atwood was an employee of petitioner, and ordered payment of sums necessary to compensate him for loss of earnings and to meet his medical and hospital expenses.
One W. J. Carson owned the truck in question, but had leased it to petitioner under terms which provided “That during the existence of this lease the motor vehicle above described shall' be under the complete control of the Lessee.” The petitioner chose to exercise this control by hiring Carson to operate the truck on approximately two round trips per week, hauling freight between Los Angeles and Phoenix. Signs reading “Apache Freight Lines” were painted on both sides of the truck and across the front. Carson had no business other than hauling freight for petitioner with this one truck, the only one he owned. He testified: “When I come into town, I go into the dock (i. e., the loading station of Apache Freight Lines in Los
From this and other testimony the referee found that Atwood was the employee of petitioner. To support such a finding it must appear that Carson himself was an employee of petitioner and not an independent contractor; further, that in engaging the services of Atwood he did so not for himself but in behalf of petitioner. Reviewing the testimony, we cannot say that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the finding.
In regard to a decision upon a question of mixed law and fact, the Supreme Court has said in Hillen v. Industrial Acc. Com., 199 Cal. 577, at page 580 [250 Pac. 570] :
The award is affirmed.
York, Acting P. J., and Doran, J., concurred.