
    Ward Furniture Company v. Ortner.
    Opinion delivered February 22, 1926.
    Master and servant—negligence op independent contractor.— Where A company employed B company to kiln-dry lumber, the latter company having entire control of the premises, A company’s servant, injured by a defective door while engaged in removing lumber from the kiln, has no right of action against his employer.
    Appeal from Sebastian Circuit Court, Fort Smith District; Jolvn E. Tatum, Judge;
    reversed.
    
      Daily & Woods, for appellant.
    
      J. B. Karnopp, for appellee.
   Humphreys, J.

This suit was instituted by appellee against appellant in the circuit court of Sebastian County, Fort Smith District, to recover damages for personal injuries in attempting to open the door on the west side of a kiln or drying-room on the premises of the Garrison Furniture Company inbrder to light up the room from which he and other employees of appellant were about to remove lumber which had been seasoned by .the drying process. The door fell upon and injured appellee when he attempted to open it, and his claim for damages is based upon the fact that the kiln- or room had been leased by appellant from the Garrison Furniture Company, and that appellant had negligently permitted the carriage upon which the door ran to get out of order and to remain in a dangerous condition on account of its failure to inspect same.

Appellant filed an answer to the complaint, denying its control over the kiln or room as well as all the material allegations of negligence contained therein, and interposed the additional defenses of contributory negligence and assumed risk.

At the conclusion of the testimony appellant requested the court to instruct a verdict in its favor, which the court refused to do, over its objection and exception.

The cause was then submitted to a jury upon, the pleading’s, testimony, and instructions of the court, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for $500, from which.is this appeal.

Appellant has waived all of its Objections and exceptions save the refusal of the trial court to instruct a verdict in its favor, and insists upon a reversal'of the judgment and a dismissal of the cause on account of the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and judgment.

The following facts are revealed in the record by the undisputed testimony: .Appellant and the Garrison Furniture 'Company are separate and independent corporations engaged in the manufacturing business in this State. The two corporations entered into an oral contract by the terms of which the Garrison Furniture Company agreed to kiln-dry lumber for appellant in any one or more of three kilns not otherwise in use for the stipulated sum of $3 per thousand feet. The Garrison Furniture Company operated the kilns, retained control over them, and kiln-dried the lumber according to its own methods. Thé extent of appellant’s authority upon the premises of the Garrison Furniture Company was to put its lumber in the kilns and take it out and to use its own employees for that purpose.

It goes without saying, under the undisputed facts thus detailed, that appellant owed no duty to its employees to inspect the mechanism and appliances of the kilns and to keep them in order.

Appellee based his right to recover damages upon the theory that appellant had leased the kilns from the Garrison Furniture Company under the terms of which it had the control and management of them to the same extent as if it owned them. He failed to establish his theory by proof, and must fail to recover damages for the injury he received while attempting to open the door to the kiln in question.

For the reason assigned the judgment must be reversed, and the cause dismissed. It is so ordered.  