McCRAW et al.
v.
CALVINE MILLS, Inc. et al.
No. 535.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
March 2, 1951.*659 Helms & Mulliss, James B. McMillan, Charlotte, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Taliaferro, Clarkson & Grier, Charlotte, for defendant-appellant Homer Gaddy.
Smathers & Carpenter, Charlotte, for Calvine Mills, Inc., and Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co., defendants-appellees.
DEVIN, Justice.
The question presented is whether under the evidence shown by the record Joseph E. McCraw, the decedent, at the time of his death by accident, was an employee of Calvine Mills, Inc., or was an employee of defendants Gaddy while the latter were engaged in work for the corporate defendant under an independent contract. The Industrial Commission found he was an employee of defendant Mills, Inc., while the Judge of the Superior Court adopted the contrary view, holding that decedent was an employee of defendants Gaddy as independent contractors, and not an employee of defendant Mills, Inc.
The definition of independent contractor and the distinction to be drawn between the relationship of independent contractor and that of employee, in cases arising under the Workmen's Compensation Act, G.S. § 97-1 et seq., have been frequently stated by this Court. Scott v. Waccamaw Lumber Co., 232 N.C. 162, 59, S.E.2d 425; Perley v. Ballenger Paving Co., 228 N.C. 479, 46 S.E.2d 298; Brown v. Bottoms Truck Lines, 227 N.C. 299, 42 S.E.2d 71; Smith v. Southern Waste Paper Co., 226 N.C. 47, 36 S.E.2d 730; Hayes v. Board of Trustees of Elon College, 224 N.C. 11, 29 S.E.2d 137; Beach *660 v. McLean, 219 N.C. 521, 14 S.E.2d 515; Gadsden v. Craft & Co., 173 N.C. 418, 92 S.E. 174, 20 A.L.R. 662; Denny v. Burlington, 155 N.C. 33, 70 S.E. 1085. In its simplest form an independent contractor may be said to be one who exercises an independent employment and contracts to do certain work according to his own judgment and method, without being subject to his employer except as to the result of his work. Perley v. Ballenger Paving Co., 228 N.C. 479, 46 S.E.2d 298, supra. When one undertakes to do a specific job under contract and the manner of doing it, including employment, payment and control of persons working with or under him, is left entirely to him, he will be regarded as an independent contractor unless the person for whom the work is being done has retained the right to exercise control in respect to the manner in which the work is to be executed. Denny v. Burlington, 155 N.C. 33, 70 S.E. 1085. The test is whether the party for whom the work is being done has the right to control the worker with respect to the manner or method of doing the work, as distinguished from the right merely to require certain definite results conforming to the contract. If the employer has right of control, it is immaterial whether he actually exercises it. Scott v. Waccamaw Lumber Co., 232 N.C. 162, 59 S.E.2d 425.
As the findings of fact made by the Industrial Commission must be held conclusive on appeal to the Superior Court and in this Court, if supported by competent evidence, Vause v. Vause Farm Equipment Co., 233 N.C. 88, 63 S.E.2d 173, a careful examination and analysis of the testimony presented to the Industrial Commission is in order. The evidence shows these material facts: The defendant Calvine Mills, Inc., is and was at the times referred to engaged in the manufacture of cloth. Desiring to have the mill building painted, it accepted the written proposal of S. J. Gaddy to do this work on the terms set out in the following letter: "For the sum of ten thousand and five hundred dollars ($10,500) we propose to paint the Calvine Mill interior and exterior in accordance with the specifications drawn up by the DuPont Paint Company. You are to furnish all materials, drop cloths, and rigging. We are to furnish all brushes and skilled labor. As work progresses you are to advance weekly payroll. We will assume all responsibility and do A-1 job. Thanking you for this opportunity of quoting you and hoping to be awarded this work. (Signed) S. J. Gaddy."
The defendant Mills, Inc., was to make advancements on the contract to enable defendants Gaddy to meet their payrolls. The mill being in operation, it was understood that the painting on the inside of the building should be done at such times and places as would not interfere with the operation of the mill, and that this would be done on Saturdays and Sundays when the mill was usually closed. S. J. Gaddy and his son Homer Gaddy, who became interested with him, carried out this paintting contract, employing a number of painters ranging from four on some days to twenty or more on weekends. Homer Gaddy kept the time of the employed painters, and each week obtained from defendant Mills, Inc., in a lump sum an amount sufficient to pay the wages of the workmen including an amount for the two Gaddys which they charged against their anticipated profits on the contract. The decedent McCraw was one of the painters on the job, employed by and carried on Gaddys' payroll, and had been so employed four or five weeks before his death. S. J. Gaddy had been for many years a painting contractor and painter but had retired from active work until he made this contract. Homer Gaddy had been engaged for a number of years in the painting business with his son, brother and cousin.
S. J. Gaddy testified that he made the contract to paint the mill according to the specifications for $10,500, and to furnish all the labor, brushes and ladders; that he and Homer Gaddy did the job according to specifications in a satisfactory manner and were paid the contract price. "He (the mill superintendent) did not give us any orders or instructions. * * *661 There was no change in the specifications except when we got through the superintendent had an additional room and asked us about it. That was additional work and we got paid for it." On request and as an accommodation a certain pipe in the mill was painted red. "Nobody at the mill told us how to hire or fire; they never told us how much to pay anybody; they never told us how to work and how not to work. My son and I exercised all the control over employees. Nobody else controlled them in any way. I did not recognize any right on the part of the mill to give any different orders or instruction other than that contained in the letter, other than the specifications we had to work by. Other than that I did not recognize any right on the part of the mill to give me further orders."
Homer Gaddy testified for the plaintiffs that he participated with S. J. Gaddy in making the estimates for the work. This was based on the plans and specifications furnished by defendant Mills, Inc., and it was to be done in accordance with specifications drawn up by the Du-Pont Paint Company. He said the mill was to furnish the paint and all materials including drop cloth and rigging, while he and S. J. Gaddy were to furnish skilled labor and all brushes and ladders. "We assumed all responsibility and were to do an A-1 job." He testified that in compliance with the contract he and his father employed the painters, put them on "our" payrolls and paid them. Neither of them was on the mill's payroll, nor were any of the painters they employed. "The mill didn't know who was on our payroll." Joseph McCraw, the decedent, had previously worked for S. J. Gaddy on a number of occasions. No one at the mill knew anything about his employment. Neither S. J. Gaddy nor Homer Gaddy used a brush. They directed the work of the painters.
Homer Gaddy further testified: "We employed the men and told them where to work, when to begin work, what place to work at, what work to do. We exercised all the control over the men that was exercised while they were at work. Nobody at the mill attempted to tell us what men we worked. We decided where the men were to work. The superintendent would tell me where I could work. He would tell us we could work in a certain room. I told my men when to go to work, and how to do the work, and what to do, and then I told them when to quit, and I kept their time and paid them, and the mill didn't care whether we worked any single men or we didn't work a certain man. The only thing the mill looked for was an A-1 job finished in the agreed time. They weren't caring whether we worked three men, six men or twenty men. We worked as many men as we wanted to. No one had anything to do with that but me and my father. * * * We had the right to fire these men if they didn't work properly, and no one but my father and myself had the right to fire them. My father and I were the men that agreed with these men as to the rate of pay. We agreed with each painter as to his rate of pay. * * * The only instructions we got from the mill was the plans and specifications, and they would tell us from one day to the next what sections of the mill we could work in. They never told us who to work, or when to work there."
This evidence produced by the plaintiffs would seem to satisfy in all respects the definition of an independent contractor. Hayes v. Board of Trustees of Elon College, supra. S. J. Gaddy and Homer Gaddy were engaged in a separate and independent business, to-wit, that of painting contractors, which required independent use of the special skill, knowledge and experience incident to that business. They were not in the employ of the mill, except for this contract, and were not subject to discharge as such. They were free to use such workmen painters and as many or few as they saw fit, with full control over them as to hiring and firing, wages and hours, times and places. S. J. Gaddy and Homer Gaddy were subject only to the terms of the contract and the specifications forming a part thereof. Any changes in the contract or specifications were matters of agreement between the contracting parties, *662 and any additional work was to be done and paid for as should be agreed upon.
But the plaintiffs rely for reversal of the ruling below upon certain other testimony given by the witness Homer Gaddy, over objection, which we quote, as follows:
"Q. As far as you were concerned, Mr. Gaddy, the mill superintendent or the mill owner or the general manager, they had the right to make requests of you as to the manner in which you did the work, didn't they? A. Absolutely.
"Q. As far as you were concerned in doing that job, you recognized their right to tell you how to do it? A. Absolutely.
"Q. And they did have the right under your agreement to prescribe the way and manner in which you did that job? A. Yes, sir.
"Q. Or make changes in the specifications as they saw fit as the job went along? A. Yes, sir.
"Q. Or tell you to knock off work in a particular room so they could do whatever they wanted to do there? A. Yes, sir.
"Q. Or to prescribe the hours that your men would be permitted to paint overhead before they would resume operation of the machinery? A. Yes, sir."
It will be noted, however, that Homer Gaddy did not make the contract though he figured with S. J. Gaddy, his father, as to the cost and price proposed, and afterward became a partner with S. J. Gaddy in supervising the performance of the contract and sharing in the profits. He testified he had had no direct dealings with any of the mill officials, except to obtain weekly checks with which to pay his painters for their work, and that the letter of S. J. Gaddy and its acceptance by the mill, and the plans and specifications called for constituted the entire contract. He had no personal knowledge of the contract except as shown by these writings. Hence his quoted testimony elicited under examination would seem to set forth merely what he regarded as the effect of the contract, and his interpretation of the results which might follow conjectural situations. The question posed for us is to be determined not by what this witness thought the contract meant, but by what was agreed upon. Overall Co. v. Holmes, 186 N.C. 428, 119 S.E. 817. That the contracting parties could alter the specifications in immaterial respects or provide for additional work for extra pay would not change the relationship of the parties or make the employees of S. J. and Homer Gaddy employees of the mill. The fact that no control over the details of the work or of the employees of Gaddy was in fact exercised by the mill would indicate the practical interpretation of the contract by the parties thereto as one providing for an independent employment. Smith v. Southern Waste Paper Co., supra.
We conclude that the portions of the testimony of Homer Gaddy relied on by the plaintiffs, if competent, are not controlling so as to give decisive character to the relationship of the parties, and that the evidence as a whole presents an unmistakable picture of an independent contract for painting defendant's mill, and that the decedent at the time of his accidental injury and death was not an employee of defendant Calvine Mills, Inc., but of the defendants Gaddy.
The judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed.