Easton v. Industrial Accident Commission

167 P. 288, 34 Cal. App. 321, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 87
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 14, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1699.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 167 P. 288 (Easton v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Easton v. Industrial Accident Commission, 167 P. 288, 34 Cal. App. 321, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 87 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

This is an action brought b"y petitioner for a review of an award made by the defendant in favor of one A. C. Sohn, as an employee of petitioner. In his application for adjustment of his claim, said Sohn alleged that he received the injury complained of on December 1, 1916, while in the service of said petitioner, and while engaged in driving a wagon for the purpose of delivering bread on behalf of petitioner in the city of Stockton, California. It is alleged in the application that the accident from which the injury complained of arose, occurred in front of petitioner’s bakery-shop while said applicant Sohn was engaged in unloading a bakery wagon; that there being no step on the wagon, he was obliged to use the hub of the wheel in order to get on and off; that in thus using the wheel for a step, his foot slipped and he received a broken knee-cap. He was asked to explain how the injury happened, and if he had stepped up on the hub with the right foot, and he answered: “With the left foot, and when that slipped off, it threw the weight on my right one and it simply bent the knee back and broke the knee-cap. Q. Were you getting on the wagon or off the wagon? A. I was getting off the wagon.”

*323 It is contended that the following findings are not supported by the evidence: “1. That J. Sohn, applicant herein, was injured on the first day of December, 1916, at Stockton, California, while in the employment of defendant, H. E. Easton, doing business under the name and style of Quality Bakery. 2. That the said employment of applicant was as a salesman and delivery-man, working upon a commission basis on the amount of goods sold by him, and that such occupation by applicant was not that of an independent contractor, but was that of an employee of defendant. 3. That said injury arose out of and happened in the course of said employment, was proximately caused thereby, and occurred while the injured employee was performing service growing out of and incidental thereto, in the following manner: While alighting from his wagon, applicant slipped and fell and fractured the patella or knee-cap.”

The sole question as to which there appears to be any controversy is whether or not the injured man was an employee of the petitioner or was an independent contractor. The nature of his employment appears from the testimony of the applicant, Sohn, and that of the petitioner, Easton. There is a very sharp conflict in the testimony of these two witnesses upon this question. The findings of .the commission seem to have been based upon the testimony of the applicant Sohn and the circumstances surrounding his service, and if there was evidence sufficient to justify the findings, we are not at liberty, under the rule, to disturb the conclusion reached by the commission based upon such findings. (Western Indemnity Co. v. Pillsbury, 172 Cal. 807, [159 Pac. 721].) If applicant was not an employee of petitioner, or if he was an independent contractor, the commission had not authority to award compensation. (Carstens v. Pillsbury, 172 Cal. 572; [158 Pac. 218].)

Applicant Sohn testified that he entered the employment of petitioner on the tenth day of October, 1916. “Q. What were the terms of the contract of hire between you? A. I was guaranteed fifteen dollars per week. Q. When you say that you were guaranteed fifteen dollars a week, if you sold bread on a commission basis in excess of that amount, did you receive the amount over and above the fifteen dollars per week? A. I returned him all that I had taken in on this commission and over fifteen dollars I give back to him at the *324 end of the week. He kept track of this twenty per cent commission and at the end of the week if that commission overrun the amount of fifteen dollars, I paid it back to him.” He testified that the horse and wagon used by him for the distribution of the bread and that he was driving was furnished by petitioner at his own cost, the arrangement being that he was to furnish the horse and wagon that applicant drove on his route; that this wagon had the name of “The Quality Bakery” painted on it by petitioner’s direction and the phone number of his place of business.

Witness was asked if fifteen dollars was the average weekly wage of men driving bakery wagons in Stockton, and he replied that it was not the union wage and was not the average wage, which was eighteen dollars per week. “Q. Were you willing to work for fifteen dollars ? A. When I went to Mr. Easton, he told me that he could not afford to pay over fifteen dollars a week, and so I went to work for him because I was not making very much money when I was working on a commission. Q. I cannot see what the necessity was for a commission basis between you and Mr. Easton if you had a guaranteed salary of fifteen dollars a week, and if you made over that on the commission basis, you returned it to him. Can you explain how that occurs? A. When I took the bread out of the shop in the morning, I was charged the full retail price for that bread and when I came back in the evening, the bread which I had not sold was checked out again, back into the shop again and then he give me twenty per cent discount on that bread to cover my day’s wages. Q. But I cannot see why there was any necessity of making any arrangement when you were guaranteed to be paid fifteen dollars a week and could not earn any -more than fifteen dollars a week. A. Well, it seemed to come handy to pay me that way every day, because I had to stand everything that I put on the book. I had to trust people in town and he did not stand anything. That is the only reason I know that he did that. Q. Then you say that you had to stand whatever you put on the boob. Did you keep an account with your customers? A. I did. Q. And Mr. Easton had nothing to do with that account? A. No, sir. Everything he sold me at the time was, he said: ‘If you trust anything out, you will have to stand that loss yourself.’ Q. With that sort of an explanation, it would look like Mr. Easton simply guaranteed that *325 your business would amount to fifteen dollars a week, if you were charged with the bread that you took out in the morning and given credit for what you returned at night? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you paid him for what bread you had sold during the day, and took the chance of collecting where you gave credit? A. I took that on my own shoulders to get that money. Q. Why should you take the chances of getting the money for bread delivered, if you were not going to make anything by it? If you were paid fifteen dollars a week in wages, why should you extend credit and take the chances of collecting? A. Because I was working for his interest to get rid of his bread, and the more I sold it was that much better for him, because I got the money. I was acquainted with the people. Q. But it was distinctly understood between you and Mr. Easton that if you extended credit to anyone, that you took the chances of collecting? A. It was. Q. And each night you settled with Mr. Easton for the bread that you sold during the day? A. Yes, I did, less the twenty per cent discount. Q. And when did you settle with him then for this fifteen dollars per week ? A. At the end of the week all that this discount overrun fifteen dollars, I give back to him at the end of the week. The discount ran up something like eighteen dollars every week that I had collected at the end of the week and I handed the balance back to him. I mean the percentage. Q.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P. 288, 34 Cal. App. 321, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easton-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1917.