Jeffreys-McElrath Manufacturing Co. v. Huiet

196 Ga. 710
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 12, 1943
DocketNo. 14606
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 196 Ga. 710 (Jeffreys-McElrath Manufacturing Co. v. Huiet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffreys-McElrath Manufacturing Co. v. Huiet, 196 Ga. 710 (Ga. 1943).

Opinion

Bell, Chief Justice.

According to the evidence, the defendant is both an “employer” and an “employing unit” within the meaning of the unemployment compensation act. Ga. L. 1937, 806, 841-2, § 19(f)-(g). It is engaged in the business of processing and selling lumber, and articles manufactured from lumber. It acquires standing timber by purchasing either the land on which it stands or the timber itself under timber leases. It owns and operates a large sawmill at its plant near Macon, but it also contracts with operators of smaller mills to convert standing trees owned by it into lumber, and with still others to haul the lumber from these mills to its plant. In some cases it contracts with loggers to fell the standing trees, cut them into logs, and haul the logs to the sawmills. These contractors are not themselves “employers” within the meaning of the act, not having the required number of employees, and not being otherwise subject to its provisions. They do employ laborers, however; and the judge found that while they are independent contractors, employing directly their own workmen, the individuals so employed by them are to be deemed employees of the defendant, under the provisions of this statute. See section 19(f), as quoted in part, supra. The defendant contends that this section is ambiguous and cannot be properly construed as applying to such a state of facts. It invokes the rule of strict construction that is ordinarily applied to tax statutes, and points to various words in this provision, especially the term work, which it insists, if properly construed, would require a different result.

The unemployment compensation act is quite lengthy, and it may be that some of its provisions should be construed strictly as a taxing statute, and that others should be interpreted according to some more liberal rule. For example, the provisions which determine the amount of the exaction, by prescribing the rate of contribution and defining wages or remuneration upon which it should be computed, might be subject to one rule of construction, while those relating to other matters would be subject to a different rule. Thus section 19(f) should perhaps be construed in part as a taxing [719]*719statute, since it may under some conditions either create or increase a tax liability as against some one; but even so, the paramount rule in all cases is to ascertain the intention of the legislature, looking to the statute as a whole, and keeping in view at all times the old law, the evil, and the remedy. Under this rule, we are of the opinion that section 19(f) covers the present case as to most of its features. Stripped of such terms and conditions as are not here in question, this section provides, in effect, that when an employing unit contracts with another for work that is a part of its usual business, the employees of the contractor while engaged in such work are to be deemed employees of the employing unit for all purposes of the act. If the employing unit shall become liable for and pay contributions on account of such employees, it may recover the same from such contractor. If the contractor is himself an employer within the meaning of the act, he alone is liable for the contributions on account of his employees. While there may have been other purposes inducing the enactment of this section, it seems to us that at least one purpose was to prevent owners of large unitary businesses from breaking them up into small operations, and thereby defeating the objects intended by the General Assembly.

It is argued that section 19(f) relates only to “work,” whereas in this case the contractors employed machinery and money, as well as labor, in performing their contracts. This argument, we think, unduly restricts the word. Its meaning here cannot be limited to the mere exertion of physical or mental effort, but must be taken to include the accomplishment of any result necessarily or usually required as a part of the business of the employing unit as it is actually conducted, even though equipment and labor both be employed. The exaction is made, of course, only as to labor, the wages paid being the basis of the required contributions.

Whether in any case the work let to the contractor is a part of the usual business of the employing unit is ordinarily a question of fact.. The business of this defendant is that of producing and selling lumber and articles made from lumber. Although formerly it bought some of the logs that were used at its mill, it had ceased this practice before the present suit was filed; and it does not now buy any logs, whether delivered in the woods or at its plant, nor does it buy rough lumber. It conducts its business by purchasing standing timber which is put through the usual proc[720]*720esses of manufacture from which finished products result. Some of these operations are performed for it by others as contractors; and as to all of them except one; namely, the hauling of rough lumber, the evidence authorized the inference that they constituted parts of the defendant’s usual business. There was no evidence that the defendant at any time was engaged in the hauling of rough lumber from the small mills to its plant by individuals directly employed by it, but it appeared without dispute that all such transportation was accomplished by it solely through independent contractors, and thus that such hauling or transportation was not a part of its usual business. We shall refer to the exception as to ' hauling rough lumber later on in this opinion, and in the meantime it will be implied; but before dealing with it further, some additional observations should be made as to the general aspects of the case and applicability of the statute.

In ruling that the finding of the judge was authorized as to some of the operations, we do not overlook the provisions of the act defining employment as services performed by an individual for wages, and declaring that such services shall be deemed employment subject to the act, unless it is shown, among other things, that such individual is customarily engaged in. an independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business. § 19(h) (6) (C). These provisions are- to be construed in harmony with those in sub-paragraph (f), declaring in express terms that, under the conditions there stated, “the employing unit shall for all the purposes of this act be deemed to employ each individual in the employ of each such contractor or subcontractor.” Accordingly, the fact that no wages are paid by the defendant directly to such employees will not render section 19(f) inapplicable; the wages paid by the contractor being reasonably ascertainable, and constituting the basis for determining the contributions required of such employing unit.

Nor will the fact that the contractor may be customarily engaged in an independently established business have the effect of relieving the employing unit, where it contracts for work that is actually a part of its usual trade or business. As to this phase, the present case might perhaps be different if the defendant did not itself operate a sawmill, to which the other mills and related operations, as the judge was authorized to find, were merely auxiliary. In connection with this mill, the defendant, with the one exception as [721]*721to hauling rough lumber, performed directly, with its own employees, substantially all of the hinds of acts that it contracted with other persons to perform in connection with such other sawmills; and in these circumstances the work of the same kind performed by such contractors necessarily constituted a part of its usual business.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Ga. 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffreys-mcelrath-manufacturing-co-v-huiet-ga-1943.