64 A.2d 39 | Conn. | 1949
The complaint in this action for a declaratory judgment alleges the following facts: The plaintiff had issued to the defendant dairy company a policy of insurance covering its liability for bodily injuries caused by accident arising out of the ownership and use of motor vehicles it owned and a policy covering its liability to any of its employees under the Workmen's Compensation Act. The deceased, a thirteen-year-old boy who was accompanying one of *296 the employees of the dairy company while he was using a truck owned by it in making milk deliveries, fell from the truck and died as the result. The administrator upon the deceased's estate is threatening to bring suit against the dairy company for damages for the death, claiming that the deceased was not its employee within the Workmen's Compensation Act. The plaintiff contends that the deceased was such an employee. It sought a declaratory judgment determining whether or not that was so. The case was claimed for trial to the jury, certain interrogatories were submitted to them and, upon the basis of the answers they made and other facts it found, the trial court adjudged that the deceased was not an employee of the dairy company within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Act. From that judgment the plaintiff has appealed.
The dairy company filed no pleadings, but the administrator, to whom we shall hereinafter refer as the defendant, filed an answer, and thereafter a claim in the usual form that the case be put on the jury list. Subsequently the plaintiff made a motion that the case be stricken from that list; and in that motion it stated that, while issues of fact might be submitted to the jury as in other actions, it was improper to claim the entire case for the jury. The court denied the motion without filing a memorandum. At the beginning of the trial, over which a judge other than the one who denied the motion presided, the plaintiff made an oral motion that the case be heard by the court without a jury on the ground that no issue distinctly cognizable at law was presented upon the pleadings. The trial court denied the motion, stating that it would abide by the earlier ruling. When the case was tried, the court, instead of submitting the case to the jury *297 for a general verdict, put to them seven specific interrogatories which they answered.
Before us the plaintiff contends that it had a right to have all the issues in the case tried by the court without a jury and that to submit any of them to the jury constituted error. The constitution provides: "The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate." Conn. Const. Art.
The constitutional provision does not prevent the legislature from requiring jury trials in cases not within its terms. Accordingly, it is now provided that certain specified actions and "civil actions involving such an issue of fact as, prior to January 1, 1880, would not present a question properly cognizable in equity" shall, if a proper claim is made, be entered on the jury docket, but that certain specified actions and "all other special statutory proceedings which, prior to January 1, 1880, were not triable by jury, shall be entered on the docket as court cases." General Statutes (Rev. 1930) 5624. Actions for declaratory judgments were created by a statute enacted in 1921; Public Acts, 1921, Chap. 258; and, subject to the constitutional limitation we have stated, are under the statute to be entered upon the court docket. The vital issue in the case before us is whether the deceased was within the terms of the Workmen's Compensation Act and so could not maintain an action against the dairy company based upon the common-law negligence of its employee. The workmen's compensation law was first enacted in 1913, and so the issue here presented was not one which was triable by a jury in 1818, when the constitution was adopted, or in 1880, so that under neither the constitution *299
nor the statute was it one which could properly be entered on the jury docket, even when claimed for it. It is true that a court may, on the application of either party, order that any issue or issues of fact in an action demanding equitable relief be tried to a jury; General Statutes, 5625; but an action for a declaratory judgment is not one in equity; Silberman v. McLaughlin,
In a special finding made by the trial court on motion of the defendant and incorporated into the judgment file, these facts are stated: The dairy company operated a dairy and milk delivery routes. More than five employees worked for it and so it was within the Workmen's Compensation Act. It had on May 25, 1946, and had had for about three weeks previously, an employee named Danaher who operated one of its milk routes. On Saturday, May 18, 1946, a week before the day of the accident, about 8 o'clock in the morning, the deceased, in accordance with an arrangement made by him, his father and Danaher, met Danaher as he was starting out on his assigned route, helped him deliver milk to the customers until all were served and then went with him to the dairy. There the deceased started to assist in unloading the truck but was stopped by Danaher. About noon that day Danaher gave him $2. On May 25, 1946, the deceased again met Danaher as he was starting on his route, in accordance with an understanding between the two, helped him make deliveries and remained with him *300 until the time of the accident. Danaher intended to give the deceased $2 at the conclusion of the day, but the accident intervened. Danaher was the driver of an established milk route. He was paid weekly wages upon the company's pay roll, and, while entitled to commissions for securing new customers, he had received none. The company supplied the milk and set the price for its sale. It furnished, maintained and repaired the necessary equipment. It retained the right to control his work and methods used in it and could discharge him at any time. He was required to do the work personally and had no authority to hire a substitute without the company's permission. He was obliged to turn over to it any money he collected, and it determined the customers to whom credit should be given.
The special finding concludes with a statement that the jury in response to an interrogatory found that Danaher was not an independent contractor. The plaintiff in its brief disavows any purpose to attack that conclusion, but, stressing the word "independent" in the interrogatory, claims that Danaher was nevertheless a contractor within the meaning of 5230 of the General Statutes, which provides that, when a principal employer shall procure work to be done for him wholly or in part "by a contractor, or through him by a subcontractor," as a part of the trade or business of the principal employer and in, on or about premises under his control, he shall be liable to the same extent as though the work were done without the intervention of the contractor or subcontractor. In its brief the plaintiff definitely bases its claim that the deceased was within the Workmen's Compensation Act upon our decision in Hoard v. Sears Roebuck Co.,
An employee ordinarily works under an agreement with the employer. Where, however, one undertakes to perform work for another under a contract which makes him responsible only for the result and under which he is not subject to the general control of the principal as regards the means and methods by which that result is to be accomplished, he is not an employee within the Compensation Act. Tortorici v. Sharp Moosop, Inc.,
The plaintiff in its assignments of error attacks certain of the paragraphs in the special finding. We point out in passing that such a finding becomes a part of the judgment; it is a very different thing from a finding made under Practice Book, 336, for the purpose of presenting to this court for review claimed errors of law in the course of the trial; see Corbett v. Matz,
The plaintiff does not claim that the deceased was hired by Danaher acting as an employee within the scope of his authority or that Danaher was an independent contractor. Its sole contention is that Danaher was a "contractor" within the provisions of 5230. *303
Upon the undisputed facts in the record, that contention is without support. We do not need to consider whether the deceased was hired by Danaher to help him or was merely a volunteer to whom Danaher paid or expected to pay money in the nature of gratuities; Gibbs v. Downs,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred except DICKENSON, J., who concurred in the result.