79 Pa. Super. 505 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922
Opinion by
Plaintiff was a teamster who owned and drove his own team and for more than a dozen years had done hauling of various kinds for defendant and others, as occasion arose, at a per diem rate which covered the personal services of himself, the use of the team and other equipment necessary to do the work. Defendant, engaged in furnishing telephone service over its lines, employed plaintiff from time to time to haul telephone poles from its ware room to points along its lines when they were being maintained, repaired and renewed by its own linemen. Plaintiff’s work consisted of loading, hauling, unloading and helping to erect and set the poles in place. It was done under the direction of one of the defendant’s foremen who told plaintiff what to do from day to day. The foreman and another employee of defendant sometimes helped plaintiff to load the poles and he helped them to raise and set the poles. Plaintiff was not employed for any specified period, but worked when called upon. He was paid for each day or fraction thereof which he worked. He was not carried on the pay roll, but rendered his bills at the end of each week. On January 30, 1919, when the plaintiff had been working daily for about five days, and while engaged in skidding poles pre
Did the relation of employer and employee, or in other words, master and servant, exist between the parties when the injury complained of was sustained? If it did not, the plaintiff was an independent contractor, and his case does not fall within the protection of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2,1915, P. L. 736. The character of employment of plaintiff has been found by the referee to be that of an employee, and there is ample evidence in the record to sustain the finding. Plaintiff had no contract for the doing of any definite or specific work, but his was merely an engagement to do any and all work which required the use of teams and this under the direction of, and at times with the assistance of, defendant’s foreman. It is not a case of letting out work to another without retaining any control over the work, except as to results accomplished, but rather a case of service rendered in the course of an occupation supervised and directed as to means and manners of performance. Defendant’s foreman had full control over the extent, character and manner of service rendered by plaintiff. The fact that plaintiff was not carried on defendant’s pay roll is without significance. What he drew each week was wages and compensation for the use of his team and not payments on account of a contract price. It is manifest that the relation of plaintiff to defendant was that of employee and not independent con
Plaintiff being an employee, the question remains, was the employment during which he was injured casual in character and not in the regular course of the business of the employer ? Section 104 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915 expressly excludes from the operation of its provisions “persons whose employment is casual in character and not in the regular course of the business of the employer.” The language quoted was interpreted by the Supreme Court in Blake v. Wilson, 268 Pa. 469, in which Justice Stewart said: “We think it apparent that two conditions were in the legislative thought, which, however, because of the conjunction used connecting them, must both concur, neither in itself being sufficient to constitute an exception. We have then the two conditions to consider: (1) the casual employment; (2) the regular course of the employer’s business.” Was the present claimant’s employment both casual in character and outside the regular course of the business of the employer? The expression “casual in character” as used in the statute has a distinct reference to the engagement or contract to render service. An employee’s engagement is casual in character when it comes about by chance and for no fixed duration of time: Blake v. Wilson, supra. If the hiring be incidental or occasional, for a limited and temporary purpose, though within the scope of the master’s business, the employment is casual. See Callihan v. Montgomery, 272 Pa. 56, and the decisions from other jurisdictions therein cited. When the tests stated in our own cases and those of other jurisdictions are applied to the case at bar, it is found to be one of “employment casual in character,”
In Callihan v. Montgomery, 272 Pa. 56, defendant, operating an oil well, employed plaintiff’s husband, a skilled mechanic engaged in business for himself, to repair an engine used to run a pump under agreement to pay $1.25 an hour for the time required to make the repairs; during the progress of the work, it was found necessary to take the cylinder of the engine to mechanic’s shop for reboring. While waiting for a representative of defendant to transport him, he stepped into an adjoining pump house and was caught in the machinery and killed. It was held that the employment was casual and not in the regular course of the business of defendant, the court saying: “the casual employment of one, for the performance of an odd job, may occur in conducting a business and still not be within its regular course. For instance, emergency repair work on a machine used in the operation of a business can always be said to take place in the course of that business, as all machinery, at some time or other, is bound to need repair, but such work if not of a kind usually performed by or under the control of the person conducting the business, would be outside the regular course thereof. The legislature evidently intended, by the use of the words ‘regular course,’ to give them some definite significance and the most natural meaning is that they refer to the normal operations which regularly constitute the business in question, excluding incidental or occasional operations arising out of the transaction of that business, such as, now and again, repairing the premises, appliances or machinery used therein. While repair work may be considered an important incident to any business using machinery, and,
The judgment is affirmed.