Blasdell v. Industrial Commission

181 P.2d 620, 65 Ariz. 373, 1947 Ariz. LEXIS 164
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1947
DocketNo. 4944.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 181 P.2d 620 (Blasdell v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blasdell v. Industrial Commission, 181 P.2d 620, 65 Ariz. 373, 1947 Ariz. LEXIS 164 (Ark. 1947).

Opinion

UDALL, Judge.

J. J. Blasdell and L. M. McLeod, a partnership doing business as M. B. M. Farms, bring before us for review an award of the Industrial Commission of Arizona to one Severiano Ruelas for an injury suffered by him. These parties will hereafter be referred to as the M. B. M. Farms and the Commission, respectively, and the individuals involved will be designated by their surnames.

No dispute exists over the fact of the injury, the only issue being whether the evidence sustains the award of the Commission which was based upon its necessary finding that Ruelas was an employee of the M. B. M. Farms.

The record shows that the M. B. M. Farms were engaged in the business of *375 growing, packing and shipping vegetables commercially, for sale in eastern markets. Some of the vegetables which it shipped were grown by it on its own lands, and others were purchased as growing crops to be later harvested, processed, shipped and sold.

In the Spring of 1946 it purchased 115 acres of growing onions near Laveen. In the latter part of April, 1946, Blasdell, on behalf of the partnership, entered into an oral contract with one Armando Canez to harvest this 115 acres of onions. By the terms of the contract Canez was to secure and furnish all of the necessary tools (except a grader which was to be provided by the M. B. M. Farms), employ his own workmen, supervise their work, and deliver to the trucks of the M. B. M. Farms at the field not less than three nor more than eight cars of onions per day. Payment for the work under the contract was to be based upon the price of a finished sack which was computed on the basis of twenty cents per field sack plus thirteen cents per packed out sack. It was further agreed that the onions were to meet a government standard of 85% grade or better.

Ruelas was one of the workmen employed by Canez on this job, his particular duty being to sew up the sacks after they had been filled at the grader some thirty feet from where he worked. The Commission found as a fact that Ruelas was an agricultural worker not employed in the use of machinery.

On May 13, 1946, after Ruelas had finished sewing up one particular sack, he undertook with an axe to cut the string with which the sack was sewed, and while so doing, accidentally cut his right index finger. At the instigation of a Commission investigator, Ruelas, on July 22, 1946, filed a claim for compensation wherein M. B. M. Farms was listed as the employer. When the matter was called to the attention of the M. B. M. Farms it denied that it was, or ever had been, an employer of Ruelas and refused to submit the usual employer’s report of injury or assume any liability whatsoever. A hearing before a referee was had on August 8, 1946, and on August 15 the Commission made an award to Ruelas as an employee of the M. B. M. Farms. A Petition for Rehearing was denied.

Since August 29, 1944, M. B. M. Farms has carried a Workmen’s- Compensation Insurance policy with the Commission (Form 0006), covering all its general agricultural workers, whether employed in the use of machinery or not. Canez, however, carried no insurance upon even those agricultural workers employed by him in the use of machinery and, from his testimony, seemed totally unaware of the existence of the Workmen’s Compensation Law or of the Industrial Commission in Arizona. Although we are not here concerned with his derelictions or responsibilities in the matter, it might be noted in passing that he paid Ruelas $150.00, an amount far in excess of Ruelas’ doctor and hospital fees. Ruelas failed to appear at the hearing held before *376 the Commission’s referee and apparently has lost all interest therein.

The pertinent question in this case is whether Canez was an employee of M. B. M. Farms or was an independent contractor. If he was an employee then the men, including Ruelas, working in his crew and under his direction would occupy a similar status and would be protected under the policy as issued. It would make no difference that M. B. M. Farms failed to list these men as its employees or pay premiums on them to the Commission. They would still be covered by the M. B. M. policy insuring all agricultural workers. West Chandler Farms Co. v. Industrial Commission, 64 Ariz. 383, 173 P.2d 84. If, however, Canez was an independent contractor he was under no statutory obligation to so- insure such of his own agricultural employees as Ruelas “not employed in the use of machinery”. Sec. 56-928. And as, in fact, he did not insure them, the injured man here in question would not be entitled to relief under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.

The body of law concerned with distinguishing independent contractors from employees is, indeed, huge. And though no hard and fast rule can be set forth, but instead each case must be determined by the sum total of its own facts, the general test laid down by our own statute (Sec. 56-928) and by the great weight of authority is whether the alleged employer “retains supervision or control over the method of reaching a certain result, or whether his control is limited to the result reached, leaving the method to the other-party.” United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Industrial Commission, 42 Ariz. 422, 26 P.2d 1012, 1015. In order to apply this-test and so determine the extent of this-“right of control”, courts look for a variety of signposts or indicia none of which are in themselves conclusive but which when taken together and applied to a particular set of facts, aid in making the line to be drawn more clear. Prosser on Torts, 1941, pp. 474, 475; Restatement of the Law of Agency, Ch. 7, Sec. 220; Lee Moor Contracting Co. v. Blanton, 49 Ariz. 130, 65 P.2d 35; Consolidated Motors v. Ketcham, 49 Ariz. 295, 66 P.2d 246; Industrial Commission v. Meddock, 65 Ariz. 324, 180 P.2d 580.

The indication of these signposts-from the facts at hand is clearly that Canez was an independent- contractor. He was-employed to do a job which had a definite beginning and end, i. e., to harvest 115 acres of onions. He had complete charge of hiring and firing his crew, getting them to> and from the job in his own trucks, setting their wage scale and paying them and directing them in their work. He kept their production records and supplied them with-, the necessary hand clippers. The only machinery supplied by M. B. M. Farms was a grader. Canez himself was paid in large-sums and at irregular intervals, the payment being based upon the amount of onions, harvested, and to standards set not by the M. B. M. Farms but by the Government.. *377 And running these harvest crews on different crops and for different farms seemed to have been his distinct occupation for three or four years, requiring him to hire at times as many as 200 pickers. Not only was Canez subject to no supervision or control by M. B. M.

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Bluebook (online)
181 P.2d 620, 65 Ariz. 373, 1947 Ariz. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blasdell-v-industrial-commission-ariz-1947.