Empire Star Mines Co. v. California Employment Commission

168 P.2d 686, 28 Cal. 2d 33, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 192
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1946
DocketSac. 5680
StatusPublished
Cited by108 cases

This text of 168 P.2d 686 (Empire Star Mines Co. v. California Employment Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Empire Star Mines Co. v. California Employment Commission, 168 P.2d 686, 28 Cal. 2d 33, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 192 (Cal. 1946).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

The Empire Star Mines Company contracted with certain persons, on a royalty basis, to produce ore from various portions of its properties. Upon a ruling of the California Employment Commission that these persons were employees within the meaning of the Unemployment Insurance Act (Stats. 1935, p. 1226, as amended; Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1939 Supp., Act 8780d), the mining company, under protest, paid the taxes imposed by that statute. The trial court held adversely to the state’s construction of the contracts, and the commission has appealed from the judgment entered in conformity with that determination.

For many years, the respondent has operated the Empire-North Star group of mines in the Grass Valley Mining District of California. One of them, known as the North Star Mine, contains approximately 150 miles of underground workings. In 1929, when the company commenced to operate that property, it determined that the production of ore in. some of the extensive tunnels far from the only available shaft would be commercially impracticable. The company also concluded that independent and experienced operators, with the incentive to make more than wages by skillful mining of the veins, and exercising much more care in the selection of ore than is customary in usual mining operations, could profitably work the remote ore bodies.

Accordingly, early in 1930, the company offered to lease certain of these areas in the mine. Such contracts were an old practice in the Grass Valley Mining District, the custom having been brought over from Cornwall many years ago. Prospective leasers investigated and sampled the areas for which contracts were offered and, following these examinations, many miners, usually on behalf of and in association with a group *37 of workers, executed leases of those parts of the mine which had been selected by them.

Except as to the descriptions of the areas leased, the terms of these contracts are substantially uniform. By the provisions of the agreements the lessees, who are referred to as leasers or tributers, for a period of six months were given the exclusive right to mine and carry on development work in a described area. The mining company agreed to furnish sufficient water and compressed air for operating machine drills and to supply the necessary track, tools, and drill steel; also, to hoist the ore and waste rock delivered by the leaser at the vertical shaft of the mine. A further agreement of the lessor was to place at the leaser’s disposal the necessary facilities for the milling of the ores mined by him and upon retorting the amalgam and melting the bullion, to market the product.

In consideration of the lease of the mining rights and the facilities furnished by the lessor, the parties agreed that the company should retain, as a royalty, 50 per cent of the gross recovery from all ores mined by the leaser. But there was the condition that in the event the assay value of the concentrates was less than $60 per ton, the royalty might be increased by the lessor to a reasonable amount commensurate with the extraction costs, but, under such circumstances, the leaser was given the right to dispose of his portion of the concentrates.

The leaser agreed “to perform all work in good and miner-like manner, installing timber where necessary, and maintaining all workings in a safe condition; to furnish all explosives and fuse necessary for mining operations . . ., such explosives and fuse to be purchased from the Lessor at Lessor’s cost, delivered at the mine.’’ The leaser was given the right to carry on mining operations with workmen employed upon either a wage or profit-sharing basis but, without the consent of the company, he was limited to a working force of eleven persons. The lease expressly declared that there should be “no privity of contract between said Lessor and the employees of said Lessee, but that all business transacted under the terms of this lease shall be transacted by and in the name of said Lessee. ’ ’ The leaser assumed full and sole responsibility for the operation and direction of the work done under the lease; also, the contract specified that all persons employed “by the Lessee, whether it be on a wage or tribute basis, shall be deemed the employees of the Lessee, and not under any *38 circumstances the employees of the Lessor.” The leaser was required to obtain with an insurance carrier and in an amount satisfactory to the mining company, adequate compensation insurance for himself and all workmen employed in any capacity in his operations under the lease.

Other provisions as to workmen were that although the mining company should have no part in the selection, employment or direction of the leaser’s employees, upon written request, he agreed to discharge any employee whom the lessor’s superintendent designated as objectionable. The leaser also agreed “to use suitable precautions to prevent any theft of ore, amalgam or concentrates by anyone, whether connected with Lessee’s operations or not. ...”

The tramming, hoisting, storage and milling operations of the ore produced by the leaser were to be carried on in accordance with schedules set by the company. It reserved the right to enter the leased area “to inspect work done in both underground and milling operations, for the purpose of determining the grade of ore being mined, the size and location of veins and the efficiency of milling operations.”

The leaser had the right, upon ten days’ notice, to terminate the contract. After thirty days’ notice, the lessor might do so for the failure of the leaser to perform the covenants of the lease on his part to be performed, if the operations were not financially profitable to the lessor, if the lessor should suspend all of its operations at the mine, in the event that the mine should be wholly or partially destroyed or rendered useless by fire, flood, or act of God, or upon the discovery of evidence by the lessor, through search or other means, that substantial amounts of ore, amalgam or concentrates were being stolen or not accounted for. The agreement was not assignable without the written consent of the lessor.

The leases executed in 1930 were extended, sometimes orally, for successive periods of six months. Other, leases, substantially in the same form, were signed in 1935 and again in 1939. Under protest, the company paid to the federal government amounts demanded from it for taxes claimed to be due under titles VIII and IX of the Social Security Act, Act 1 (42 U.S.C.A. § 1004 et seq.). Suit was then commenced to recover the federal taxes. Meantime, early in 1940, the California Employment Commission made a demand upon the mining company for the payment of the tax which the Unemployment Insurance Act, supra, lays upon employers subject *39 to its provisions. The basis of this demand was that the company’s leasers were employees and not independent contractors. Under protest the company then paid 3.7 per cent of the total amount received by the leasers.

In the federal litigation, the court held in favor of the mining company and following the affirmance of the judgment (Anglim v. Empire Star Mines Co., 129 F.2d 914), the present action was commenced.

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Bluebook (online)
168 P.2d 686, 28 Cal. 2d 33, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-star-mines-co-v-california-employment-commission-cal-1946.