157 A. 23 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1931
Argued May 5, 1931.
W.H. Mooney filed a claim for workmen's compensation against Julius Weidner for injuries received when a truck on which he was riding ran over an embankment on August 14, 1928. The single question involved is whether, at the time of the accident, claimant was an employee of defendant or an independent contractor. If the former, he was entitled to compensation; if the latter he was not so entitled: Kelley v. D.L. W.R.R. Co.,
There was some dispute as to the facts and the testimony was conflicting. It was the duty of the compensation authorities to analyze the evidence for the purpose of determining on which side the weight thereof lay; if there was sufficient competent evidence to support the findings of fact we must accept them as true: Slemba v. Hamilton Sons,
The Workmen's Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, declares the terms "employer" and "employee," as there used, to be synonymous with those of "master" and "servant," and in McColligan v. Penna. R.R. Co.,
Applying this test to the instant case we find that claimant was at all times subject to the instructions of defendant. It is not denied that while working in the yard he was defendant's employee. While out on the road he and Smith frequently employed such means as they saw fit to collect the junk, yet this was done in accordance with the general instructions of defendant, who retained the right to direct them in the performance of these services. He often exercised this right. The further fact that defendant discharged Smith indicates that the latter was his employee. And it follows if Smith was an employee claimant was also.
We find nothing to support the contention that claimant, when gathering junk, became an independent contractor and as such employed Smith to drive the truck for him. The truck was owned by defendant, who furnished gas and oil and paid all expenses, and was used by him for the exclusive purpose of supplying his yard with junk which was necessary for his business. He hired claimant and Smith *416 and gave them the truck for this purpose, with orders to get junk wherever they could and bring it to his yard. He did not agree to pay them by the day for this work. He adopted a much better way of compensating them to get results. He paid them by weight at a rate which gave them a satisfactory profit over what they paid for the junk. They received this profit in lieu of wages and divided it between them. They were thus really paid for piece work, and it was necessary for them to succeed in their work to get any pay. This of course was the object of defendant in adopting that system.
It was not necessary for claimant to have specific instructions each time he took the truck out. His general instructions covered all his work when using the truck to get junk, and in each and every instance he acted with the knowledge or consent of defendant. The same is true of Smith. Under the facts of the case there can be no doubt claimant was an employee and not an independent contractor: Lenhart v. Emmons Co., supra. In line with this conclusion are the cases of McCarthy v. Dunlevy-Franklin Co.,
In deciding a question such as here involved neither the compensation authorities nor the courts should be solicitous to put a claimant in the position of an independent contractor when a reasonable view of the evidence warrants a finding that he was an employee: Gailey v. State Workmen's Ins. Fund,
The judgment is affirmed. *417