Becker v. Industrial Accident Commission

298 P. 979, 212 Cal. 526, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 649
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1931
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14085.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 298 P. 979 (Becker v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. Industrial Accident Commission, 298 P. 979, 212 Cal. 526, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 649 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

THE COURT .

Certiorari to review an award of the Industrial Accident Commission in favor of Adele L. Rogers, surviving widow of Francis N. Rogers, deceased. The Com *528 mission found that “Francis N. Rogers, 67, now deceased, while employed jointly as a messenger on or about April 1, 1930, at San Francisco, California, by O. W. Becker and Charles R. Holton, sustained injury arising out of and in the course of his employment when struck by an automobile at Mission and Farragut streets, San Francisco, proximately resulting in his death”. The Commission also found “that the employment in which the deceased was engaged at the time was not casual within the meaning of section 8 (c) of said act” and that “the employment in which the deceased was engaged at the time was not that of an independent contractor”. The Commission further found that neither of the employers was insured, and “all parties were then subject to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation, Insurance and Safety Act of 1917 ’ ’. Upon 'these findings an award was made in favor of the widow of Rogers and against both Becker and Holton in the sum of $2,667.60, payable weekly, and burial expenses.

Petitioners challenge the findings of the Commission, particularly with reference to the relationship existing between .Rogers and each of the petitioners, and insist that the findings are not justified by the uncontradicted evidence in the case. There appears to be little contradiction in the evidence adduced and no real controversy as to the actual facts of the ease. The question presented, therefore, is whether or not the inferences, embodied in the findings of the Commission, are reasonably deducible from the evidence presented at the hearing before the Commission.

The facts are as follows: Francis N. Rogers, who was sixty-seven years of age, and had previously been employed as an accountant by the Bethlehem Steel Works, was employed as a general messenger for approximately a year prior to his death, by O. W. Becker, who was engaged in the fire insurance brokerage and mortgage loan business in the Monadnock Building, San Francisco. His duties as such consisted principally of calling for and delivering insurance policies and other papers in various offices in San Francisco. This employment was part time employment only, beginning at 8 o’clock in the morning and continuing until the middle of the afternoon. He was paid on the basis of $3 per day, that is to say, 75$ for a quarter of a day; $1.50 for half a day, etc. At the conclusion of each *529 day’s service, Becker and Rogers would agree as to what fraction of the day Rogers had worked and at the end of the week, on Saturday, Becker would pay to Rogers the amount due to him. Rogers’ employment with Becker took him frequently to the office of Charles R. Holton, an attorney at law, as Holton performed notarial work for Becker and it was frequently necessary for Rogers to take papers to Holton’s office, which was in the Bank of America Building on Market Street. In February, 1930, Holton undertook to do notarial work for the Hibernia Bank at the noon hour, and he employed Rogers to attend his office during the midday, while he, Holton, was absent from his office. The payment for this service, according to the testimony of Holton, was at the rate of 50^ per hour, which payment sometimes amounted to $3 a week, sometimes $3.50, but never exceeded $4. On April 1, 1930 Rogers worked for Becker until 11:30 A. M., when he left Becker’s office to get his lunch and go over to Holton’s office. He returned from Holton’s office to Becker’s office about 1:30 P. M., as he had no other place to go, and remained there until about 3:00 P. M., reading the newspaper. About 3:00 o’clock Holton telephoned to Becker to ask him to send Rogers over to his office, as he had a summons which he wished Rogers to serve for him. Becker gave Rogers the message, at the same time asking him to pay taxes for a client of his at the city hall, saying, ‘ These taxes — you were going to pay these taxes this morning, but you couldn’t do it, and in passing by you had better pay these taxes before going to serve the summons.” Rogers immediately went to Holton’s office, where he procured the summons and left with the ostensible purpose of first paying the taxes of Becker and then serving the summons for- Holton. According to the testimony of Holton, he gave Rogers no instructions with reference to the serving of the summons other than to make a notation of two possible addresses of one of the defendants on the back of the summons, and told Rogers he would pay him $1 for serving it. Rogers - was instantly killed on his way to serve the summons after alighting from a street*car at the corner of Mission and Farragut Streets about two and a half blocks from the address of the defendant mentioned in the summons. A receipted tax bill and the change from the money given to him by Becker to pay the taxes were found *530 on his body, and it is evident, therefore, that he had gone to the city hall and paid the taxes and then taken a Mission Street car for the purpose of serving the summons.

The evidence relative to the terms of Rogers’ employment and the quality of the relationship between him and the petitioners necessarily consisted almost entirely of the testimony of the petitioners for the reason that only Rogers and the petitioners were familiar with the actual terms of his employment. There was, however, also introduced in evidence the memorandum book taken from the body of Rogers after the accident, in which each day he had notéd down with meticulous care the fraction of the day which he had been employed by Becker and Holton. In parallel columns he had put down the date, the fraction of day employed by Becker, the fraction of the day employed by Holton, and the total of each day’s work, sometimes amounting to a whole day, and frequently amounting to threes fourths of a day. At the bottom of each page his earnings of the week were totaled and apparently figured on the basis of $3 per day, although in two instances when the amount totaled $4.50 from Holton, Rogers had crossed out that amount and substituted $4. This memorandum book furnishes a basis for arriving at the compensation awarded by the Commission, and the fact that no notation was made* on April 1st may have some probative value as indicating that his employment by Becker had not been completed at 11:30 -A. M.

Each of the petitioners seeks an annullment of the award upon a theory different and distinct from that advanced by his co-petitioner, and we will therefore discuss separately* the contentions advanced by each petitioner. Holton resists liability on the ground that as respects the service of the summons he was not Rogers’ employer, but that Rogers in the performance of this service was acting as_ an independent contractor. Becker admits that Rogers was a regular employee of his, but insists that the fatal injury did not arise out of and in the course of such employment for the reason .that Rogers at the time of the fatal accident was not on a mission of Becker’s employment, but was engaged solely in the performance of a service for Holton.

With reference to Holton, the question presented is* whether an attorney is liable for an injury which may hap-* *531

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Bluebook (online)
298 P. 979, 212 Cal. 526, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-industrial-accident-commission-cal-1931.