Manchester Avenue Co. v. Stewart

325 P.2d 457, 50 Cal. 2d 307, 1958 Cal. LEXIS 157
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1958
DocketL. A. 24551
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 325 P.2d 457 (Manchester Avenue Co. v. Stewart) 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
Manchester Avenue Co. v. Stewart, 325 P.2d 457, 50 Cal. 2d 307, 1958 Cal. LEXIS 157 (Cal. 1958).

Opinion

McCOMB, J.

After trial before the court without a jury in consolidated actions to recover unemployment insurance taxes paid under protest, plaintiffs appeal from a judgment for defendant.

*309 The facts in both cases are similar. Plaintiff Manchester Avenue Company owns and operates a golf course known as the Inglewood Country Club. Plaintiff Virginia Country Club owns and operates a golf course.

Some of the golfers on plaintiffs’ courses engage caddies to carry their clubs and help look for golf balls which the players might hit into the rough. At the two courses a number of caddies are available for players who desire their services. The caddies are not told when to report but come when they want to work. The caddies are paid by the players, not by plaintiffs. There is no restriction on the amount that can be paid, except that at the Inglewood course a minimum fee has been established by the club for the protection of the caddies. Neither club pays a caddie who comes in search of work but is not hired by a player.

Each player has the right to select his own caddie or to carry his own clubs if he so desires. In fact, most players carry their own clubs on golf carts. If a player desires a caddie but expresses no choice, a caddie is assigned to him on the basis of “first-come first-out” (but at the Virginia Club it is the practice to give preference to regular caddies). A caddie has the right to refuse to go with any player.

Each club maintains facilities where the caddies wait until they are called. They are required to register when they arrive and are not allowed on the practice or playing area of the course while not caddying. They are limited at such times to the area reserved for them. Caddies are not allowed to solicit employment from the players, and swearing, gambling, and the use of intoxicating liquors are prohibited. The golf pro or caddie master has the power to enforce these regulations by dismissing a caddie or by keeping him waiting while others go out.

In 1952 assessments were levied against plaintiffs for unemployment insurance taxes on the amounts the caddies had received from the players. After exhausting their administrative remedies, plaintiffs paid the taxes under protest and filed the present suits to recover the funds paid.

On the basis of the foregoing facts, the trial court found that it was not true that plaintiffs did not direct and control the manner and means of the performance of the caddies’ services and made its conclusions of law to the effect that the caddies were employees of plaintiffs and that plaintiffs were therefore not entitled to recover.

Question: Do the provisions of the Unemployment *310 Insurance Code apply to services performed in caddying or carrying a golf player’s clubs by an individual who was not in the employ of the golf club or association?

No. The following is a brief history of the unemployment insurance tax as it relates to caddies:

i. The Federal Social Security Act was passed by Congress, .effective on August 14, 1935. (49 Stats. 620 (1935).) The .California Legislature, anticipating the enactment of the federal statute, passed an Unemployment Insurance Act on June 25, 1935. (Stats. 1935, ch. 352, p. 1226.)
The Social Security Act and the State Unemployment Insurance Act are designed to encourage a uniform system of unemployment compensation by the states and the establishment of the federal-state plan whereby the details of administration are left to the various states. (See section 2 of the state act passed in 1935.) Under both acts, administrative boards are empowered to promulgate rules, regulations, and administrative interpretations.
ii. In 1936 the Federal Social Security Board adopted a rule specifically applicable to caddies, which provided that where services are performed by caddies for members of a club and the caddies are compensated, either directly or indirectly, for such services by the club members, the club will not be required to pay the tax imposed by section 901, title IX, of the Social Security Act with respect to such payments to the caddies. This was true even though the caddies might be the club’s employees. But if they performed any services for the club for which the club itself compensated them, then the club was subject to the tax. (S.S.T. 56, C.B. XV-2, 393 (1936).)
iii. On or about May 9, 1939, Prentice-Hall, Inc., published a letter addressed to it from the California Unemployment Reserves Commission (defendant’s predecessor) as follows:
“You inquire whether this Department concurs with the opinion set forth in S.S.T. 56, in which the Bureau of Internal Revenue held that:
“ ‘Where services are performed by caddies for members of the M Club and they are compensated either directly or indirectly for such services by the club members, the club will not be required to pay the tax imposed by the Social Security Act with respect to such payments to the caddies, even though the caddies may be its employees. If, however, the caddies perform any services for the club for which the club, itself, •compensates them, the club is subject to the tax.’
“We concur in the above statement.”
*311 iv. On December 5, 1940, a Codified Interpretive Opinion was issued by the Department of Employment, entitled “Status Under the Unemployment Insurance Act as Employees or Independent Contractors of Golf Caddies.” In this opinion the Department of Employment, under the “specific facts set forth and not to be considered applicable to dissimilar factual situations,” held, in effect, that caddies are employees of the golf club although paid directly by the members.
v. On October 31, 1942, the California Employment Commission rendered a unanimous decision in the case of Midwick Country Club (Commission Tax Decision No. 29), in which it held that caddies were not employees of that club but independent contractors upon the facts relating to that club, which facts were almost exactly parallel with those in the instant eases.
vi. On August 3,1943, the California Unemployment Commission issued another unanimous decision in the ease of Presidio Golf Club (Commission Tax Decision No. 321), in which it ruled that the caddies at that club were not employees subject to the Unemployment Insurance Act upon facts almost identical to those in the instant cases.
vii. Effective as of February 25, 1944, there was incorporated in the official California Department of Employment Tax Manual, paragraph 9030.04, the following: “Caddie fees: Former Rule 8.4 repealed effective January 1, 1938 deemed fees received by caddies from player on a public or private golf course or from the owner or operator thereof not to be a wage even though the caddie was subject to the direction and control of the caddie master. Since January 1, 1938, caddie fees have been considered a taxable wage under the act when paid to a caddie by the owner or operator of the golf course and provided he stood in an employment relationship with such owner or operator.

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Bluebook (online)
325 P.2d 457, 50 Cal. 2d 307, 1958 Cal. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manchester-avenue-co-v-stewart-cal-1958.