Byrd v. Employment Security Agency

388 P.2d 100, 86 Idaho 469, 1964 Ida. LEXIS 200
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 1964
Docket9291
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 388 P.2d 100 (Byrd v. Employment Security Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrd v. Employment Security Agency, 388 P.2d 100, 86 Idaho 469, 1964 Ida. LEXIS 200 (Idaho 1964).

Opinion

McQUADE, Justice.

Respondent, Idaho Employment Security Agency, is herein sometimes designated as the Agency, and the Industrial Accident Board as the Board.

The facts are uncontroverted. Otis Byrd has been a licensed barber since 1927 and has owned a barber shop as an individual or partner since that year. He has operated a barber shop at his present location for almost thirteen years. This shop houses three barber chairs. The shop is licensed to Byrd by the Idaho Department of Law Enforcement. Byrd provides janitorial services, laundry service, utilities, supplies, and all equipment for the shop except hand tools used by the individual barbers. It is customary in the barber trade for each barber to provide his own hand tools. The shop is operated during hours established by the barber’s union in the area.

Robert J. McAteer has been a registered, licensed barber for seven years following the completion of an apprenticeship. He has been employed in Byrd’s barber shop since he began working as a barber. He worked as an employee of Byrd until January 1, 1961. Byrd compensated him for his work at the rate of 80% of McAteer’s gross receipts. At that time they came to an informal verbal agreement that McAteer would thereafter operate on an independent basis and compensate Byrd for the use of *472 the chair, equipment, supplies, janitorial service, and related right to operate in the shop at the rate of $16.50 per week. After that date, McAteer continued as he had before to furnish only his own hand tools. However, after that time he was free to come and go without requesting leave of Byrd; whereas formerly, he had necessarily requested Byrd’s permission if he wished to take time off, had been subject to discharge by Byrd, and was expected to work during the regularly established shop hours. From the time that he began operating on the changed basis, McAteer kept his own change and his receipts separate from Byrd ; whereas formerly, Byrd had complete control of the money. McAteer began paying his own social security tax and keeping records of his income; whereas previously Byrd had paid social security tax and unemployment insurance tax on McAteer’s wages and provided him with industrial accident insurance. Byrd felt that he had no right to exercise supervision over Mc-Ateer’s services after McAteer began operating on the changed basis; whereas Byrd had the right to exercise supervision over McAteer’s work previously, although, as is customary in the barber trade, he had not, in fact, directed McAteer in the actual performance of the details of the services he rendered for customers after McAteer had completed his apprenticeship. The rental agreement between McAteer and Byrd was on a week-to-week basis with no provision for liability in the event that either terminated the agreement without notice.

Earl King has been a barber since about 1920. King arranged in 1961 to lease a chair in Byrd’s barber shop. Because of health conditions and because he was engaged in another business on a part-time basis, he planned to work only as a part-time barber. Furthermore, he agreed to compensate Byrd for the use of the chair at the rate of 15% of his income from his barber business. As in the case of Mc-Ateer, Byrd furnished everything to King except for King’s hand tools. King was free to work when he decided to do so. There was no provision for liability in the event that the lease was terminated by either party without notice, and, in fact, when King decided to leave the business, he merely informed Byrd that he was through leasing the chair.

The Board’s order affirming the appeals examiner’s decision that appellant must pay employment security tax is predicated upon I.C. § 72-1316(d) and I.C. § 54-501. Although I.C. § 72-1316(d) has subsequently been amended, Sess.Laws, 1963, p. 875, on the date of the Board’s decision, the statute read as follows:

“(d) Services performed by an individual only as an employee shall be covered employment, but there shall not be included in said covered employ *473 ment, nor shall such term employee include. (1) any individual who, under the usual common law rules applicable in determining the employer-employee relationship, has the status of an independent contractor or (2) any individual (except an officer of a corporation) who is not an employee under such common law rules.”

I.C. § 54-501 states:

“After July 1st, 1957, it shall be unlawful to own or operate a barber shop unless it is at all times under the direct supervision and management of a registered barber and unless a barber shop license is first obtained from the department of law enforcement for each barber shop owned and operated. The applicant for such license must furnish proof that the shop is located and equipped to meet the sanitary requirements of the department of public health. * * * ”

The Board concluded that the above statute requires an owner or operator to secure a license and maintain a registered barber to manage and supervise the entire shop, including the other barbers; that since Byrd is the licensed owner of the barber shop, this statutory requirement is sufficient showing of the right of control in Byrd to create the statutory relationship of employer-employee; that because of this statutory right of control, there cannot be said to be a relationship of principal-independent contractor.

The appellant lists four assignments of error. It is clear, however, that only one issue is presented by this appeal. That is, whether the requirements of I.C. § 54 — 501 place the right of control in the owner of the shop and thus establish the relationship of employer-employee with the other barbers in the shop.

,We are in full agreement with the Board that the term “barber shop” means the entire shop, including the barbers therein. We see no justification for reading an exclusion into this statute. The primary reason for its enactment was to protect public health. Pearce v. Moffatt, 60 Idaho 370, 92 P.2d 146 (1939). Because of the physical contact maintained between barber and patron, the term “barber shop” must be held to include not only the physical establishment, but the barbers therein. A statute must be construed in the light of the purpose and intent of the legislature in enacting the statute. In re Gem State Academy Bakery, 70 Idaho 531, 224 P.2d 529 (1950).

Appellant contends that I.C. § 54 — 501 does not relate to the Employment Security Law. From a thorough study of the Barber Law, however, it appears that the legislature never anticipated that the principal-independent contractor relationship *474 would exist in a barber shop. The holder of the license is made responsible for seeing that the shop complies with the requirements of the Department of Public Health. I.C. § 54 — 516 makes it clear that his license may be suspended if the sanitary requirements are not met. The legislature never anticipated that one could lease a portion of the shop and remain an independent contractor. The licensee is required to either keep the entire shop clean or close the entire shop down.

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Bluebook (online)
388 P.2d 100, 86 Idaho 469, 1964 Ida. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrd-v-employment-security-agency-idaho-1964.