Jannak v. Department of Labor & Industries

43 P.2d 34, 181 Wash. 396, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 557
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1935
DocketNo. 25151. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 P.2d 34 (Jannak v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jannak v. Department of Labor & Industries, 43 P.2d 34, 181 Wash. 396, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 557 (Wash. 1935).

Opinions

Millard, C. J.

The Spokane Ski Club is a domestic non-profit corporation. John Jannak, who was not a member of the club and had no connection with it other than as its paid employee, was employed by the club in general construction work for an agreed wage of three dollars a day. While actually engaged in the performance of his duties in connection with the work of construction of a building for the club, Jannak was injured.

The building upon which this workman was employed was two stories high, seventy-two feet long and twenty feet wide. It was divided into several rooms comprising one dormitory for men, and one dormitory for women, together with a kitchen, pantry, dining room and large main room. The building is permanent in its nature and was erected by the club for the convenience and comfort of its members. That building constituted one of the inducements offered by the club for members to retain their membership and to attract new members to the club. The members of the club paid a bunk fee of twenty-five cents a night for the privilege of using the building. Such fees were applied in payment of bunk furnishings for the building.

The court found:

“That the building so erected was upon one of the slopes of Mount Spokane, Spokane county, state of Washington. That during the erection of the building, members of the Spokane Ski Club volunteered labor *398 upon said building. That the plaintiff was employed to help in the construction of said building, and to supervise the erection of the building in accordance with blueprint plans. That plaintiff’s contract for employment was to the effect that he would receive as payment for his services Three Dollars ($3.00) per day and expenses, and was to work Sundays when volunteer assistance was available, until such time as the walls and roof of the building were completed, and following the completion of the roofing of the building, plaintiff was to be steadily employed working upon the interior of the building until it was wholly completed. That at the time plaintiff was injured, he was working with a peavy upon a log that was being rolled into place.”

Jannak filed with the department of labor and industries a claim for compensation. The department rejected the claim upon the theory that, at the time of the injuries, the claimant was not in the employ of an employer engaged in extrahazardous operations within the meaning of the workmen’s compensation act. An appeal to the superior court from the joint board’s order sustaining the department resulted in findings of fact in favor of the plaintiff and a judgment directing the department to entertain the claim and to award the claimant such compensation as might be proper under the compensation act. The department appealed.

Appellant insists that the case of Carsten v. Department of Labor and Industries, 172 Wash. 51, 19 P. (2d) 133, is controlling.

The facts, which are recited above, clearly bring this case within the rule enunciated in Carsten v. Department of Labor and Industries, supra. In the case cited, we held that a carpenter employed by an ordinary householder to make repairs or improvements on his property was not a workman engaged in extra-hazardous employment, because his employer was not engaged in such employment. That is, as was pointed *399 out in the dissenting opinion, the rule announced by the majority excluded from the protection of the workmen’s compensation act the person whose employment is purely casual and the person whose employment is not for the purpose of the employer’s regular trade or regular business. "While the writer disagrees with the rule that, to bring a workman within the operation of the statute, his employer must have been engaged in the building construction or other work for profit, or as a business or industry, he is bound thereby, in view of our refusal to modify that rule in Dalmasso v. Department of Labor and Industries, ante p. 294, 43 P. (2d) 32.

In Carsten v. Department of Labor and Industries, supra, in which the majority held that the householder was not an employer within the contemplation of the act because the householder was not engaged in the business of building, the carpenter was employed to assist the householder in the building of a chicken house, and during the course of the employment was injured. In that case, after referring to the case of Edwards v. Department of Labor and Industries, 146 Wash. 266, 262 Pac. 973, which held that a truck driver, employed by a wholesale merchant in making heavy deliveries to customers, was not engaged in extrahazardous employment because the employer was not engaged in the business of trucking, the majority said:

“If hauling one’s own goods is not the business of transfer, drayage or hauling for hire, then it would seem that a householder who erects a chicken house on his home property is not, by reason of that act, engaged in the business of building.”

If the householder employing a carpenter to assist in the construction of a chicken house was not an employer engaged in extrahazardous work within the contemplation of the workmen’s compensation act because *400 the householder was not engaged in the business of chicken-house, or other building, construction, it logically follows that a ski club, a golf club, or a hunting-club could not be said to be engaged in the business of building construction by reason of the fact that it erected a bunk house or a club house. The size of the building- is a factor of no importance. The ski club, like the householder in the Carsten case, was not engaged in the business of building construction.

The author of this opinion, in the dissenting opinion in Carsten v. Department of Labor and Industries, supra, called attention, as follows, to the illogical position taken by the majority:

“I cannot agree that, as Lewis did not employ the appellant workman to build or repair as an incident to a gainful business or industry of the employer, the appellant was not within the protection of the statute. This court has never held that one employed otherwise than for the purpose of the employer’s trade or business was not entitled to the benefit of the statute. In the absence of a provision expressly excluding such employees — -no extravagant principle of inclusion is necessary to bring appellant within the operation of the compensation act — all persons engaged in the employment of any employer engaged in any extrahaz-ardous work are workmen ‘under this act.’ Engaged in work means no more than occupied in doing- that work or devoting* attention and effort to that work. One can be so engaged temporarily, or that may be one’s business. . . .
“The benefit of the appellant’s labor in building the chicken house inured to the employer, the landowner. While not the regular trade or business of Lewis, yet during the time he was supervising and aiding- in the construction of a building on his land, Lewis was engaged in, or occupied in doing, or devoting attention and effort to, extrahazardous work. If he supervised the construction of a mansion for himself and employed fifty workmen, it would hardly be contended that the statute did not apply.

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Bluebook (online)
43 P.2d 34, 181 Wash. 396, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jannak-v-department-of-labor-industries-wash-1935.