El Reno Broom Co. v. Roberts

1929 OK 355, 281 P. 273, 138 Okla. 235, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 24, 1929
Docket19307
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1929 OK 355 (El Reno Broom Co. v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
El Reno Broom Co. v. Roberts, 1929 OK 355, 281 P. 273, 138 Okla. 235, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 535 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

HUNT, J.

This is an original proceeding in this court to review an award of the State Industrial Commission in a proceeding wherein I. N. Roberts appeared as claimant and El Reno Broom Company was respondent and Continental Casualty Company was insurance carrier, and the parties will be so referred to herein.

On June 6, 1927, the claimant, I. N. Roberts, sustained an injury on the premises of the respondent when he slipped and fell from a certain platform, as disclosed by employee’s first notice of injury and claim for compensation, which was filed with the State Industrial Commission on July 8, 1927. After hearings duly had by the Commission, the order and award herein complained of was, on April 5, 1928, entered in favor of claimant.

Respondent contends that there is no evidence to support the award herein, and that same is contrary to law.

From a careful review of this entire record and upon consideration of the respective contentions of the parties, we are of the opinion that the decisive question here presented is whether or not the claimant was in the employ of respondent at the time of the injury. Claimant contends that this was a question of fact to be determined by the Industrial Commission, which had been determined by the Commission in favor of claimant, and calls our attention to the oft-an-nóunced rule that this court will not review questions of fact where there is any competent evidence to support the finding of the Commission. This rule is too well settled to require the citation of authorities, and has been applied and followed in numerous cases before this court wherein the evidence upon which the award of the Commission was sustained was indeed slight, but, since the compensation law was passed for the benefit of injured employees and must receive a most liberal construction, we consider this rule most wholesome and just and absolutely essential to a proper administration of the Compensation Law. However, even though awards of the Industrial Commission have been and will be sustained upon very slight evidence, it is essential that the claimant be an employee of the respondent within the meaning of the Compensation Act at the time of the injury, and as to whether or not the facts as disclosed by the record establish the existence of the relation of employer and employee within the meaning of the Compensation Law, is one of law for the court.

It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine, first, just what is necessary to create the relation of employer and employee within the meaning of the Compensation Law; and, second, whether there is any evidence supporting the finding of the existence of such relation herein between the claimant and respondent. Considerable testimony was introduced on this subject, claimant making much of the fact, as disclosed by the record, that he had first entered the employ of respondent in 1918, some nine years prior to the injury, and had continued “off and on” in said employment since that time. It is not a question, however, as to when the employment began nor how long it continued, but the question is, Did same exist on the date of the injury? And if so, did the injury arise out of and in the course of said employment? With which latter questions, however, we are not concerned in the determination of the primary question as to the existence of the relation of employer and employee.

The undisputed facts herein are that claimant was first employed by respondent in August, 1918, as a broommaker, and worked “irregular,” being laid off frequently for indefinite periods and would be called back to work when needed; that during these “layoff periods” claimant secured other employment and worked at other places; that on May 27, 1927, he was laid off indefinitely, and between that time and June 6th, the date of the injury, claimant had gone to the factory to. see about work and been informed there was none, and Monday, June 6th, about 6 p. m., he again called to see about work and went into the plant to call up by phone to inquire if any orders had come in and to get two brooms he had sold, and while going into the factory he slipped and fell and sustained the injury for which he seeks compensation in this proceeding. No one was in the factory at the time, and claimant gained entrance by use of a key which he had been permitted to carry since he was first employed in 1918. It is further admitted that claimant had been paid in full when he was laid off on May 27th, and had not earned or drawn any pay from that time up to the date of the injury, and drew no wages on that date. The record further clearly discloses that the factory had shut down and had not been in operation since May 27th, and the occasion for claimant being there after working hours on the evening of June 6th was to *237 use tlie telephone to call someone and make inquiry as to when he might go back to work, and als,o to get the two brooms he had sold.

The terms “employer,” “employee,” “hazardous employment,” are clearly. defined in the Compensation Act, section 7284, C. O. S. 1921, and the essential elements necessary to create the relation of employer and employee have heretofore been determined by this court; the most recent pronouncement being Hamilton v. Randall, 136 Okla. 170, 276 Pac. 705, wherein the court adopted the syllabus in Moore & Gleason v. Taylor, 97 Okla. 193, 223 Pac. 611, the second and third paragraphs of the syllabus being as follows:

“The relation of employer and employee is contractual. Like every other contractual relation, it is a product of the meeting of the minds of the contracting parties. To create the relation of employer and employee there must be an express contract or such acts as will show unequivocally that the parties recognize one another as master and servant.
“Our 'Workmen’s Compensation Law is remedial in its objects and operation, and should receive a liberal construction in favor of those entitled to its benefits, but before one is entitled thereto, he should be held to strict proof that he is in a class embraced within the provisions of the law and nothing can be presumed or inferred in this respect.”

This case followed the rule theretofore announced in Harris v. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co., 91 Okla. 39, 216 Pac. 116, wherein this court said:

“The words ‘employee’ and ‘wages,’ as used in these definitions, are correlative terms, and their definitions should be considered together in determining who atre embraced in section 2 of the act. Thus considered, it is readily seen that compensation shall be payable for injuries sustained (sec. 2) by ‘any person engaged in manual or mechanical work’ (subd. 4, sec. 7284), ‘under contract of hiring in force at the time of the accident’ (subd. 8, see. 7284). This is not militated against by the fact that ‘wages’ is also made the basis for computing compensation.
“* * * Workmen’s Compensation Acts are remedial in character, and should receive a liberal construction in order to effectuate their purposes and objects, but they should not be amended by judicial construction upon an attenuated theory of inclusion. Persons entitled to the benefits of the act shouVl be favored by a liberal interpretation of its provisions, but for this very reason they should be held to strict proof of their title as beneficiaries.”

In the case of Hogan v. Industrial Commission, 86 Okla. 161, 207 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 355, 281 P. 273, 138 Okla. 235, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-reno-broom-co-v-roberts-okla-1929.