Claim for Compensation of Tomondong v. Ikezaki

32 Haw. 373, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 24
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1932
DocketNo. 2048.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 373 (Claim for Compensation of Tomondong v. Ikezaki) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claim for Compensation of Tomondong v. Ikezaki, 32 Haw. 373, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 24 (haw 1932).

Opinion

*374 OPINION OP THE OOUKT BY

BANKS, J.

The instant proceeding was originally begun before the industrial accident board and was brought under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Ch. 209, R. L. 1925). The board awarded compensation against the defendant and in favor of claimant as follows: “ * * * the costs of medical, surgical and hospital services and supplies, as provided under chapter 209, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1925, and for and during a period of his said total and permanent disability, commencing with January 27th, 1930, the eighth day of the said disability, a weekly compensation of sixty per centum (60%) of his average weekly wage for and during a period not to exceed three hundred twelve (312) weeks; provided, further, that the amount of compensation to be paid under this award shall not exceed in the aggregate the sum of five thousand dollars ($5,000.00). * * * The board further finds the average weekly wage * * * to be fourteen dollars and forty-two cents ($14.42), and sixty per centum (60%) of the said average weekly wage to be eight dollars and sixty-five cents ($8.65) — or if paid in monthly installments to be thirty-seven dollars and forty-eight cents *375 ($37.48).” The defendant appealed from this award to the circuit court, where the case was again tried with the result that the award of the board was affirmed. The defendant brings the case here on exceptions.

At the trial before the circuit court it was stipulated by the parties that the case should be heard and determined on the evidence taken before the industrial accident board, which was accordingly done.

The uncontradicted evidence shows that on January 20, 1930, the claimant, while engaged in clearing a plot of ground in the Bingham Park Tract of rock and leveling the same, was seriously injured by a premature explosion of dynamite. As a result of his injuries he lost the sight of both eyes and a part of one arm.

The following are also undisputed facts. One Ikezaki, a general contractor engaged in business in Honolulu, had a contract with the Liberty Investment Company, the owner of the land, for the construction thereon of a house. This contract included the preparation of the ground for that purpose. The claimant and one Shimabuku were doing this preparatory work under some arrangement with Ikezaki. Ikezaki was to pay for this work the fixed sum of sixty dollars.

Other than the price to be paid for the work there is a sharp dispute between the parties, it being contended on the one hand by the defendant that under the evidence the claimant was an independent contractor, while on the other hand it is contended by the claimant that under the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act he was an employee of Ikezaki.

The case of Ikoma v. Oahu Sugar Co., 23 Haw. 291, upon which the circuit judge based his conclusion that the defendant was liable, was a case in which an independent contractor who was engaged in constructing a roadbed on the property of the Oahu Sugar Company *376 employed one Ikoma to assist in the work. In construing the Workmen’s Compensation Act this court held under the facts before it that the Oahu Sugar Company was the owner of the land and the owner and operator of the business being carried on and was therefore liable for the injuries sustained by Ikoma. In applying that case to the case at bar and in basing his decision on it, as he very clearly did, the circuit judge must have reached the conclusion that the business that was being carried on upon the premises where the claimant was at work at the time of his injuries was that of preparing the ground for the erection of a house which Ikezaki had contracted to erect for the Liberty Investment Company, the- owner of the property. He must also have reached the conclusion that Ikezaki was virtually the owner and operator of this business and that Shimabuku in undertaking to prepare the ground on behalf of Ikezaki had done so as an independent contractor. He must have reached the further conclusion that the claimant was Shimabuku’s employee. That the above conclusions were reached by the circuit judge seems evident from the portion of his decision in which he says: “Under this situation as to the facts and evidence in this case it appears, and I so find, that claimant was a workman employed by defendant and said defendant was an employer of claimant within the provision of our workmen’s compensation law as interpreted by our supreme court in Re Ichijiro Ikoma, 23 Haw. 291. No.attempt has been made to distinguish this ease from the case at bar and it seems to be clearly in point and decisive of this case. The fact that claimant was to be paid out of a lump sum in lieu of wages does not take his case out of the operation of our workmen’s compensation law any more than the fact that he was hired or employed indirectly through a contractor or subcontractor prevents him from being a workman employed *377 in an industrial employment within the said law. The liberal construction given by our supreme court to our workmen’s compensation law in the Ikoma, case, supra, as well as in the cases of Silva v. Kaiwiki Mill Co., 24 Haw. 324; Ching Hon Yet v. See Sang Co., 24 Haw. 731, 739, and Wong Chee v. Yee Wo Chan, 26 Haw. 785, 795, is too well established to be further questioned. The reenactment by our legislature of our workmen’s compensation law with the construction placed thereon by our supreme court in the Ikoma case, supra, is conclusive and binding and makes said construction a part of the workmen’s compensation law itself, especially in view of the fact that no amendments were made by the legislature to take the employee of a subcontractor out of the operation of said workmen’s compensation law in so far as the principal contractor is concerned. See Territory v. Pacific Coast Casualty Company, 22 Haw. 446, 453. The Ikoma case, supra, clearly holds that an injured workman whether employed directly by the owner or operator of a business or indirectly through a contractor is entitled to compensation as against the owner or operator of said business.” Without these conclusions of fact the Ikoma case was entirely inapplicable. We think all the conclusions that were reached by the circuit judge, except the last one, are amply supported by the evidence and were therefore correctly reached. It is manifest that the only business that was being carried on upon the premises at the time of claimant’s injuries was that of preparing a piece of unoccupied ground for the erection of a house thereon. It is also manifest that the sole owner and operator of this business was Ikezaki. And it is clearly shown by the evidence that Shimabuku’s relation to Ikezaki was that of an independent contractor.

Speaking on the subject of what constitutes an independent contractor, it is said in 28 R. C. L. 762: “In *378

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 373, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claim-for-compensation-of-tomondong-v-ikezaki-haw-1932.