Pacific Employers Insurance v. Industrial Accident Commission

136 P.2d 633, 58 Cal. App. 2d 262, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 39
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 19, 1943
DocketCiv. 6893
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 136 P.2d 633 (Pacific Employers Insurance v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Employers Insurance v. Industrial Accident Commission, 136 P.2d 633, 58 Cal. App. 2d 262, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 39 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

By means of certiorari the Pacific Employers Insurance Company seeks to cancel an award of compensation in favor of Harry E. Sowell for injuries received, on the theory that he was not an employee of Walker-Hovey Company, Inc., the petitioner’s assured. The determination of this petition depends almost entirely upon the question as to whether there is substantial evidence to support the com *264 mission’s finding that the workman was an employee of the assured company at the time of the accident.

Walker-Hovey Company, Inc., owned 460 acres of timber land in Modoc County, California. It contracted in writing with Kesterson Lumber Corporation of Klamath Palls, Oregon, to sell a large quantity of lumber at $12 per thousand feet, to be cut and delivered at the rate of 200,000 feet per working day. The contract provided that:

“Either party may terminate further deliveries under the terms of this contract by giving the other party one week’s notice in writing.”

The petitioner, Pacific Employers Insurance Company was the insurer of the Walker-Hovey Company, which had a large number of workmen employed. In September, 1939, the last mentioned company contracted with Martin Stoehsler to log and cut the timber. The Walker-Hovey Company did not have the necessary equipment with which to carry on the enterprise. Stoehsler told Charles Hovey, who represented the owner of the timber, that he did not have experienced loggers or the required men to do the work. He also told Mr. Hovey that he carried no workman’s compensation insurance, and did not then have the money with which to purchase a policy. He testified that the Walker-Hovey Company agreed. to carry on its insurance list all men employed by Stoehsler for the month of September, 1939. Mr. Hovey told Stoehsler that William J. Sowell owned some logging equipment and advised him to rent it. It consisted of a log-loading machine, called a jammer, a bulldozer and a “cat.” The loading machine was held in a machine shop in Klamath Palls for payment of repairs in a sum amounting to $2,250. It was agreed that Stoehsler would rent the bulldozer and the “cat” for $20 per day, and that Sowell would rent the log loading machine and personally operate it for forty cents per thousand feet of lumber handled. The machinery was moved to the lumber camp. The Walker-Hovey Company then had a number of its employees working in that camp in preparation for the logging enterprise. Richard H. Browne was act-, ing as its representative and manager in that camp. Kenneth Ross, who was the company’s local boss of workmen, was engaged in constructing a log dock for several days following September 21st.

Martin Stoehsler did not commence operations under his logging contract until September 18, 1939. After William *265 Sowell rented his equipment and agreed to work for Stoehsler he communicated with his brother, Harry B. Sowell, the claimant, telling him he could get a job in that lumber camp. Harry and his son Beuben immediately went to the camp, but did not at once go to work. September 21st. he was contacted by Walker-Hovey Company’s local boss, Kenneth Boss, for whom he worked three days helping to build the dock. The company paid him for that service. Begarding his general employment he said, “I was supposed to have the job loading. Q. Did you know for whom? A. I understood Hovey and Walker. . . . That is what he told me when he called me, Stoehsler was the boss.” Following the completion of the dock upon which he worked for three days, he was employed for only two additional days as loader, when he was struck by a log and seriously injured. He said that on September 26th, “A log hit me in the back, knocked me up agin the bunk of the truck. [It struck me] in the back, back of the shoulders, put my chest here up agin the bunk of the truck.” As a result of those injuries Harry Sowell was disabled for two and a half years.

A claim for compensation was filed with the Industrial Accident Commission against the Walker-Hovey Company, Martin Stoehsler and the Pacific Employers Insurance Company. After hearing findings were adopted January 29, 1941, relieving from liability the Walker-Hovey Company and Martin Stoehsler on the ground that they were not employers of the workman. An award was however made against William Sowell as the employer of his brother Harry B. Sowell. The Pacific Employers Insurance Company was discharged from liability.

At the first hearing it appeared that the insurance company had paid the sum of $1,145 for expenses incurred by the claimant on account of his injuries sustained in the accident, for the refunding of which sum that company asked for a lien against any award which might be made. This demand for a lien was denied. Because the application for a lien was denied, the Pacific Employers Insurance Company petitioned for a rehearing upon several grounds, including insufficiency of the evidence. William Sowell also asked for a rehearing. Both petitions were granted.

Upon rehearing the commission adopted findings determining that Harry B. Sowell was injured on September 26, 1939, *266 in the course of his joint employment, by Walker-Hovey Company, Inc., Martin Stoehsler and William Sowell, and each of them; that the Pacific Employers Insurance Company was then the insurance carrier of Walker-Hovey Company, and that the other employers were not insured. It was found that the injuries sustained by the claimant caused temporary total disability entitling him to compensation in the sum of $25 per week, and that the employers were entitled to credit for all sums previously paid on that account. An award of $25 per week was thereupon granted to the claimant from October 4, 1939, “until the termination of disability or the further order of this Commission,” against Pacific Employers Insurance Company, Martin Stoehsler and William Sowell, together with $400 attorney’s fees. The insurance company’s demand for a lien for the refunding of said sum of $1,145 was denied. This petition for a writ of certiorari was then filed in this court.

The petitioner contends that the Pacific Employers Insurance Company was discharged from liability by the commission in its findings which were originally adopted, and that jurisdiction was therefore lost to modify those findings upon rehearing since the insurance company merely asked for a rehearing to grant its petition for a lien to reimburse its payment to the claimant of $1,145, alleged to have been made under a mistake of the law and the facts of this case.

February 14, 1941, the Pacific Employers Insurance Company filed a petition for rehearing based on general grounds, and not for the mere purpose of obtaining a lien. It states in part:

“This petition for rehearing is based on the following grounds, to wit:
“I. That the evidence does not justify the findings of fact;
“II. That the findings.of fact do not support the award;
“III. That the award is unreasonable;
“IV. That the commission acted without and in excess of its powers.”

On February 20, 1941, William Sowell also filed a separate petition for rehearing on similar grounds.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Compensation Insurance Fund v. Industrial Accident Commission
270 P.2d 55 (California Court of Appeal, 1954)
Tate v. Industrial Accident Commission
261 P.2d 759 (California Court of Appeal, 1953)
Bethlehem Pacific Coast Steel Corp. v. Industrial Accident Commission
235 P.2d 125 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
Freedman v. Industrial Accident Commission
154 P.2d 922 (California Court of Appeal, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P.2d 633, 58 Cal. App. 2d 262, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-employers-insurance-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1943.