Garrison v. Gortler

13 N.W.2d 358, 234 Iowa 541, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 554
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 7, 1944
DocketNo. 46417.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 N.W.2d 358 (Garrison v. Gortler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrison v. Gortler, 13 N.W.2d 358, 234 Iowa 541, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 554 (iowa 1944).

Opinions

Bliss, J.-

The appellee owned and operated a building and business, under the name of the R. & L. Grocery, in a residence district of Des Moines. His residence is on the same lot as the grocery store but in a separate building. The store building was used solely for the retail grocery and meat, business. Some time previous to the occurrence involved herein the appellee had a steady employee in the store, but thereafter the store was operated by him with occasional help. He testified that his wife had an interest in it and waited on customers.

The appellant, who lived close to the store, was in the employ of the Iowa Roofing Company, a concern engaged in the roofing business. He apparently was a patron of the store. The appellee had spoken to him several times about the roof of the store building leaking. It had a ridge roof shaped like an inverted letter “V.” The appellee pointed out to appellant the places where the roof leaked, and the rain came through on the inside of the store over the shelves of merchandise, the counter, ■and at other places. The ceiling and the paper on it were spotted and discolored where the rain had been leaking through. Eventually the plaster would be ruined and fall, according to the testimony.

On or about October 7 or 8, 1941, appellant was making some purchases in the store, and appellee again mentioned about *543 the roof leaking and asked appellant to repair the roof. The latter stated that he had some time off from his regular work and would do the repairing that afternoon. Appellee asked him how much the work would cost, and appellant told him that it would depend upon the grade of material he used but the cost would probably run around $12. The only understanding they had about the labor was that it would run from. $3 to $6, depending upon the time used. Appellant received 82.5 cents an hour at his regular work. Appellee furnished and paid for the roofing material and the nails. He also furnished the ladder. There was a leak around a soil pipe, and appellant put some plastic cement about the pipe at appellee’s request. The north side was completely i’oroofed except for two strips. As appellant was going-up the ladder, on the south side of the roof, carrying a forty-pound roll of roofing, and had stepped on the top rung of the ladder, one of the side pieces of the ladder buckled at that point, because of an old break, throwing appellant to the cement sidewalk below and injuring him. All of the work was done during that afternoon. Appellant did the work on his own time and not as an employee of the Iowa Eoofing Company.

In his application for arbitration the appellant alleged the fact of his employment, the work he did, and his injury, in substance, as stated above. The appellee, in his answer, admitted that the work was done and the injury received, but alleged as defenses that (1) appellant was an independent contractor (2) the employment was purely casual' and (3) was not for the purpose of the appellee’s trade or business. The commissioner found against appellee on the first defense and for him on the second and third defenses. The appellee has not cross-appealed from the ruling adverse to him. Since a determination of the third defense and a holding that the appellant’s employment at the time of his injury was for the purpose of the appellee’s trade or business are decisive of this case, we do not pass upon the casualness of the employment. There is no dispute about any materia] fact.

- I. Section 1361, chapter 70, of the 1939 Code, entitled “Workmen’s Compensation,” provides that the “chapter shall not apply to * * * 2. Persons whose employment is of a casual nature.” This section has not been changed by the legislature *544 since the enactment of the act by the Thirty-fifth General Assembly. (Chapter 147, section 1' (a); section 2477-m (a),JL913 Code Supplement.)

Section 1421, Code of 1939, provides.:

“* * * 2. ‘Workman’ or ‘employee’ means a'person who has entered into the employment of, or works under contract of service, express or implied, or apprenticeship, for an employer, except as hereinafter specified. 3. The following persons shall not be deemed ‘workmen’ or ‘employees’: a. A person whose employment is purely casual and not for the purpose of the employer’s trade or business.”

The language as it appears in the exception (a) is just as it appeared in the original enactment, Acts of the Thirty-fifth General Assembly, chapter 147, section 17 (b); section 2477-ml6 (b), 1913 Supplement. The Thirty-seventh General Assembly, chapter 270, section 10, made a decided change in exception (a) by striking out the word “and” after “casual” and substituting “or.” The Fortieth Extra General Assembly (House File 42, section 61; section 1421 (3®), Code of 1924) resubstituted “and” for “or,” so that the exception now appears as it was originally enacted.

Sections 1361 and 1421 (3a), Code, 1939, must be read together, although the latter section controls and the effect is as though it stood alone.

As the exception is now worded, one who seeks the benefit of its exclusionary provisions, as does the appellee, must establish that the employment involved is both purely casual and outside the purpose of the employer’s trade or business. Tepesch v. Johnson, 230 Iowa 37, 40, 296 N. W. 740; Gardner v. Trustees of M. E. Church, 217 Iowa 1390, 1396, 250 N. W. 740.

The only question for determination on this appeal - is, Was the appellant a person whose employment or work was, at the time of his injury, “for the purpose of the employer’s [appellee’s] trade or business”? ■ If it was, then the-judgment must be reversed. The application of the exception clause found in all definitions of the word “employee,” in all Workmen’s Compensation Acts, has troubled the courts of this country and of England since their enactment. While there is much lack *545 oí harmony in the decisions of all of these courts, some of it is more apparent than real, because of the differences in the statutory statements of the exception.

The English Compensation Act, which was enacted in 1897 and has been the model after which all similar legislation in this country has been patterned, in its definition of ‘ ‘ employee ’ ’ or “workman,” excludes “a person whose employment is of a casual nature and tvho is employed otherwise than for the purposes of the employer’s trade or business.” (Italics ours.) [Public General Acts, Edward VII, 1906, chapter 58, section 13.] Of this section, the Connecticut court, in construing an identical section in the Compensation Act of that state, Fox v. Fafnir Bearing Co., 107 Conn. 189, 193, 139 A. 778, 779, 58 A. L. R. 861, said:

“This language has been construed in numerous English decisions with results that are far from harmonious, and an English judge has said that it was ‘one of the most difficult sections of the Act.’ ”

Most of the legislatures in this country, in enacting workmen ’s-compensation legislation, haAe departed quite distinctly from the language of the exception in the English act. They have used, instead of the italicized words, language substantially as follows:

“A person whose employment is casual

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.W.2d 358, 234 Iowa 541, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrison-v-gortler-iowa-1944.