Arper v. Industrial Accident Commission

9 P.2d 220, 121 Cal. App. 240, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1166
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 1932
DocketDocket No. 606.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 P.2d 220 (Arper v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arper v. Industrial Accident Commission, 9 P.2d 220, 121 Cal. App. 240, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1166 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

*241 BARNARD, P. J.

The petitioner seeks to annul an award of the Industrial Accident Commission in favor of the respondent, Thomas Gum. On September 8, 1930, Gum was employed by the petitioner and was assisting in the repair of a pump upon premises owned by the petitioner, and on that day he sustained an injury to his left hand and forearm causing an amputation thereof about six inches below the elbow-joint. After a hearing and a rehearing, the Industrial Accident Commission awarded Gum $3,484.03 as normal compensation, and finding that the petitioner was wilfully uninsured at the time, increased the award by 10 per cent, making -a total award of $3,832.43. The only defense presented by the petitioner was and is that the employment in question was excepted and excluded from the compensation provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Insurance and Safety Act, in that it was both casual and not in the course of the trade, business, profession or occupation of the employer. The Commission found that the employment in question was not casual and that it was in the course of the trade, business, profession or occupation of the employer. The only questions presented are whether these findings are supported by the evidence.

We will first consider the evidence as to whether this employment was casual, within the meaning of that term as defined in section (8) (c) of the act. The petitioner testified that the well on his premises was 288 feet deep and that he had a pump which was operated by sucker-rods which were connected with a cable; that on the occasion in question he hired Gum to reconnect these sucker-rods by repairing a broken cable; that he told Gum that “something had happened to the sucker-rods again and we would have to pull the pump and make a repair and asked if he could come out and assist in the work”; that he then contemplated that the work would take four or five days; and that he had been doing the same sort of work for years and that this was the usual length of time required. He told of three particular occasions upon which the same repair hád previously been made, the last one being about a year before the one here in question, at which time the applicant Gum had also assisted in the work. At that

*242 time the work had taken three and a half or four days and had cost a total of $49. On the last two occasions the work had been done by the petitioner himself, the applicant Gum, and one other man. Gum was paid fifty cents an hour and his dinner. The petitioner further testified that the previous breaks had been exactly similar to the one that was being repaired on this occasion, and that such a repair “never had cost over $49 in all the years I have been doing the thing”. He testified that on this occasion they had raised the pump and taken out four or five joints of pipe in order to get at the break; that they had repaired the break, put the joints of pipe back, and were lowering the pipe back into the'well; that they had lowered it to within six feet of the bottom when the applicant allowed it to fall, causing the injuries complained of; that it would not have taken more than a half hour additional to have completed the work, had the accident not happened when it did; and that they had worked three and one-half days when the accident occurred. He also testified that later on, with two other men, he spent several days trying to repair the damages caused by allowing the pump to fall but found the pump so badly broken that he was. unable, financially, to complete the repairs. This ■testimony is largely confirmed by the evidence of Gum. When asked what he did on this particular occasion, he stated that he was going to repair the cable. He then •testified that they took the pipe up; that “We got the cable out and rebabbitted and cut the cable off inside of the connection, that -connection they have on that wire cable sucker; and we started to put it back down”; and that they were lowering the pipe when the accident happened. The applicant made the following answers to questions asked him by his attorney:

- “Q. At the time you were injured, Mr. Gum, how nearly completed was the work which you started out to do on •the job?
“A. One or two links more to put on.
“Q. One or two what?
“A. Lengths of pipe.”

• Shortly thereafter he was asked by the referee “How long would it have taken you to have put on these two lengths of pipe that remained to be put on the pipe at the *243 time of your in j ury ? ” To this he replied': “W ell, probably—■ maybe three hours.” At another time, when asked how many more days it would have taken to have completed the work, he replied: “Oh, I couldn’t say that; probably, from what I learned, it took ten or twelve days.” The ten or twelve days here referred to was work, that was subsequently done, which will hereafter be referred to in connection with the testimony of one Mullen. At another time Gum testified that the well was not dug straight, that it had many things the matter with it, and that it would have taken from three to six months to have completely fixed it. He testified that he fold the petitioner of these various things and that it was a waste of time to try and fix it temporarily; that the petitioner then told him that he was unable, financially, to do all of these things and that he wanted to fix it temporarily. He testified as follows:

“Q. Then he didn’t hire you to do it all?
“A. No, just temporarily to get through with it, see, but the work of fixing it would take about three months. He didn’t hire me permanently there, but just to fix it as quick as I could so he could irrigate.”

While he testified in response to the above question from his attorney that the work he started out to do was all completed except putting on one or two lengths of pipe, and while he told the referee that it would take probably three hours to put ■ on the remaining pipe, Gum went on to testify that it would be necessary to put in bulkheads and line up the pipe, which would take two days; to plug up a leakage in the pipe, which would take up two days; and that it would take two more days to loosen the well derrick. When asked if he was told by the petitioner to fix these bulkheads and do this other work, he replied: “When I go to a job I go ahead and fix everything that is needed.” He then admitted that the petitioner had not told him to do this work, and that he had told him that he wanted the pump fixed temporarily. It may here be observed that while the applicant testified it would take some six days to fix the bulkheads, plug the leakage and loosen the well derrick, he admitted that these same things had been done a year before when he last repaired this pump, and .the uncontradicted evidence is that the entire cost of all the *244 work done at that time was $49, and that it took no more than four days.

. We think it fully appears from this evidence, especially from the evidence of the applicant, that this work was casual within the meaning of the act.

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Related

Wheeler v. California Department of Employment
193 Cal. App. 2d 829 (California Court of Appeal, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.2d 220, 121 Cal. App. 240, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arper-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1932.