Brookover Feed Yards, Inc. v. Carlton, Commissioner

518 P.2d 470, 213 Kan. 684, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1974
Docket47,077
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 518 P.2d 470 (Brookover Feed Yards, Inc. v. Carlton, Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brookover Feed Yards, Inc. v. Carlton, Commissioner, 518 P.2d 470, 213 Kan. 684, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 432 (kan 1974).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

This is a proceeding to determine an employers liability for contributions under the employment security law <(K. S. A. 44-701, et seq.). The issue is whether the employees of a ■commercial feedlot are excluded from its coverage under the agricultural labor exemption clause.

Classification proceedings initiated by the state labor commissioner, Darrell D. Carlton, to make Brookover Feed Yards, Inc. liable for contributions for coverage of its employees under the act culminated in the commissioner’s decision dated September 11, 1969, holding Brookover liable for such contributions commencing with the year 1963.

The facts developed in proceedings held September 5, 1968, before the hearings’ officer for the commissioner, may be summarized in the following. Brookover conducts a business of custom feeding of cattle for others. It began operations in 1951. Since 1957 it has *685 operated as a corporate entity. Its office and plant facilities are on approximately 200 acres of land located about one mile north of Garden City. Its plant facilities include large scale mill and feed mixing structures, storage tanks and silos, grain drying equipment, drainage ponds, maintenance buildings, scales for weighing grain and cattle and many cattle pens. Specially designed trucks are used to convey feed from the mixing and storage plants and auger it into concrete feed bunkers for daily consumption by the cattle.

Additionally, Brookover controls 800 acres of cropland upon which feed grains are raised to be fed to cattle in the feedlot. Brookover is federally licensed for buying and storing grain and purchases most of the feed utilized in its operation from other sources. Feeding capacity in 1968 was 27,000 head of cattle with about 88% of that capacity utilized. None of the cattle belong to Brookover; however, about 25 to 35% of them usually belong to corporate “insiders”. Customers include farmers, livestock growers and packing companies. Cattle are held, fed and cared for in the feeding operation for an average period of 130 days with an average daily weight increase of two and one-half pounds per head. The corporation furnishes that which is described as all final finishing services to produce the highest quality cattle. It also loads them for shipment to market. As remuneration it receives a fixed handling or service fee per head per day plus the cost of feed consumed.

Brookover employs forty-four persons in this enterprise. Three of these are engaged in conventional crop-raising activities on the 800 acres. The others perform services at Brookover s office, mills, storage facilities, maintenance shops and feedlot on the 200 acre tract. Three of these are clerical workers whose work consists of placing orders for feeds and materials, receipting orders for cattle, preparing payrolls, reports and operating statements and generally keeping corporation records. The jobs of the others are described as cowboys, cat operator, tank cleaners, maintenance and shop workers, truck drivers, mill helpers, bunk checkers, welders and various types of foremen. Much of the record before the commissioner was devoted to depicting the “big business” aspect and the technical nature of the operation by Brookover, a coiporation whose reported assets were in excess of $1,400,000 in 1967.

In his memorandum opinion the commissioner reviewed the history of custom feedlots in Kansas and made certain findings. *686 He found Brookover s operation constituted a commercial business venture rather than an ordinary farming operation as contemplated by or known to the legislature when it enacted the employment security law. He further found that the 200 acre tract on which the principal operation was located was not a farm or ranch as contemplated by Kansas Administrative Regulation 50-1-3 then in effect. In ruling that Birookover s employees were covered by the act the commissioner exempted the three who raised crops on Brookover s other land.

Upon judicial review instituted by Brookover the commissioner’s order holding it liable for contributions for coverage of the forty-one employees during the period in question was reversed. The trial courts rationale was that by definition of the term “agricultural labor” in regulation 50-1-3 the commissioner had attempted to extend the coverage afforded by the employment security law beyond that prescribed by the legislature, that the ordinary meaning of the term “agricultural labor” embraces the raising of livestock, and federal agencies construing virtually identical federal acts have so concluded, and further that the term “agricultural labor” includes the work of those employed in commercial feedlots.

The commissioner has appealed to this court. By way of cross-appeal Brookover contends the trial court erred in denying its motion to dismiss that appeal for want of timely filing by the commissioner of his notice of appeal. The cross-appeal has no merit. The trial judge determined the effective date of his judgment. Appellant’s notice of appeal was filed within sixty days from that date; hence, it was timely filed (K. S. A. 60-258; 60- 2103 [a]).

Appellant presents numerous points of error but essentially the question is whether the labor performed by appellees employees is “agricultural labor” within the meaning of our employment security law.

The pertinent statute, K. S. A. 44-703, after establishing tax liability of employers for various types of “employment” covered by the act, provided:

“. . . (i) . . . The term ‘employment’ shall not include: . . . (4) agricultural labor. . .

Our employment security law was enacted in 1937 and the foregoing remained unchanged, without further statutory definition, during the period in question, although it was subsequently *687 amended as will be mentioned in connection with appellant’s contentions.

Appellant first asserts that judicial review is limited to determining whether the facts found are supported by the evidence before the administrative agency, and inasmuch as the trial court found there was no material dispute as to the facts, it erred in not upholding the administrative decision. Not so. K. S. A. 44-710b. (b), which authorizes review by a district court of the commissioner’s order determining liability for contributions under the act, provides:

“In any proceeding under this subsection the findings of the commission as to the facts, if supported by evidence and in the absence of fraud, shall be conclusive and the jurisdiction of said court shall be confined to questions of law.”

This statute simply prescribes the ordinary scope of judicial review of administrative action (Kansas State Board of Healing Arts v. Foote, 200 Kan. 447, Syl. ¶ 1, 436 P. 2d 828, 28 ALR 3d 472). Construction of a statute and its application to a given situation are matters of law for judicial determination. The trial court was not bound to reach the same conclusions of law as did the administrative agency even though the evidentiary facts were undisputed (Read v. Warkentin, Commissioner, 185 Kan. 286, 291, 341 P. 2d 980).

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Bluebook (online)
518 P.2d 470, 213 Kan. 684, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookover-feed-yards-inc-v-carlton-commissioner-kan-1974.