Woodard v. Southern Cas. Ins. Co.
Decision Date | 28 October 1974 |
Docket Number | No. 54615,54615 |
Citation | 305 So.2d 528 |
Parties | Ottis Lee WOODARD, Plaintiff-Appellant-Relator, v. SOUTHERN CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY et al., Defendants-Appellees-Respondents. |
Court | Louisiana Supreme Court |
L. H. Coltharp, Jr., Hall, Coltharp & Lestage, DeRidder, for defendants-appellees-respondents.
E. M. Nichols, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellant-relator.
The plaintiff Woodard sues for workmen's compensation benefits. He alleges he was injured while working as an independent contractor executing work which is part of the 'trade, business, or occupation' of the defendant Bennett, La.R.S. 23:1061, see also La.R.S. 23:1021(6), so that Bennett is liable in compensation for the injuries thus received. Bennett and his insurer (Southern Casualty) were made defendants.
The court of appeal affirmed the trial court's dismissal of Woodard's suit. 289 So.2d 500 (La.App.3d Cir. 1974). The previous courts held that a buyer-seller relationship was established, rather than that of principal-contractor, so therefore Bennett was not liable in workmen's compensation. We granted certiorari, 293 So.2d 181 (La.1974), primarily because of the substantial contention that such result was inconsistent with the decisions of this court in Bellard v. Tri-State Insurance Company, 282 So.2d 453 (La.1973) and Hart v. Richardson, 272 So.2d 316 (La.1973).
The parties concede that the principles applicable to determination of this question are set forth in Bellard v. Tri-State Insurance Company, 282 So.2d 453, 455 (La.1973) as follows:
In a continuing timber-producing arrangement such as the present, the determinative issue is thus whether the 'producer' (i.e., the contractor/seller) who cuts, hauls, and delivers the timber to the 'dealer' (i.e., the principal/buyer), is so processing the timber for the open market or is instead doing so on behalf of the dealer as part of the latter's trade, business, or occupation.
Bennett was one of several dealers to whom Boise Southern would give purchase orders for so many cords of pine pulpwood each month. Bennett would then issue forms to producers, such as the plaintiff Woodard, authorizing them to deliver wood to Boise Southern for his account. Boise Southern would pay Bennett for the wood delivered to it by them. Bennett would then pay the producers at a stipulated rate for the wood they had delivered to Boise Southern on his quota, first deducting the stumpage value for direct payment to the landowner.
Bennett, as a pulpwood dealer, also received orders from other paper mills than Boise Southern. He operated a wood-yard at DeRidder and several other locations. However, for present purposes, it is sufficient to note that Woodard exclusively produced all his pine pulpwood for Bennett's account at Boise Southern, and that the occasional load of hardwood pulpwood he occasionally harvested from the pine lands was also produced for Bennett's wood-yard, all to be used by Bennett in filling his orders of pulpwood.
Bennett secured approximately two-thirds of his pulpwood by securing the timber rights himself and then directing his producers to the tract in question. However, he encouraged his producers to seek out and secure their own timber. In these latter instances, the producer would receive an extra 50cents per cord for their services in so doing. (Nevertheless, in the usual case, the stumpage was still deducted and paid directly to the landowner.)
The plaintiff Woodard operated a truck and a crew of two men producing pulpwood exclusively for Bennett's account. The price of $18.50 per cord, less stumpage of $5.00 paid to the landowner, was paid to him each Friday by Bennett, based upon the slips of pulpwood delivered by him to Boise Southern on the Bennett account. From his net of $13.50 per cord, he paid his helpers and his truck expenses, keeping the surplus of about one hundred dollars per week as compensation for his own primarily manual labors and his own supervision and the use of his truck and equipment.
For at least four weeks before the accident, Woodard had been producing pulpwood for Bennett from the Pope tract. He himself had made arrangements with Pope to purchase the timber rights on this tract (receiving an extra 50cents per cord for such service). Each week Bennett deducted Pope's stumpage at $5.00 per cord, and made out a check to Pope for such amount.
Bennett had not, however, ever met Pope, nor had he ever gone on the Pope tract. He did not supervise Woodard's operations there.
Woodard had been working for Bennett exclusively for some four months. Prior to that, he had been producing pulpwood exclusively for another dealer. The usual practice of the industry is for a producer such as Woodard to work exclusively for a particular dealer during a period of months or years. However, if another dealer offers a better arrangement to a producer, he may terminate his arrangement with the present dealer and commence producing pulpwood for another.
The indicia relied upon by the previous courts as proving a predominately buyer-seller relationship were: Woodard had full control of his own employees and where they worked; on the Pope tract, he owned...
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