Peterson Hunting v. Labor Commission

2012 UT App 14, 269 P.3d 998, 700 Utah Adv. Rep. 67, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 17, 2012 WL 163835
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 20, 2012
Docket20100577-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2012 UT App 14 (Peterson Hunting v. Labor Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson Hunting v. Labor Commission, 2012 UT App 14, 269 P.3d 998, 700 Utah Adv. Rep. 67, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 17, 2012 WL 163835 (Utah Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

McHUGH, Presiding Judge:

{1 Kurtley Peterson, doing business as Peterson Hunting, petitions for review of the Labor Commission's (the Commission) determination that he is not exempt from compliance with the Workers' Compensation Act as an agricultural employer. 1 See Utah Code Ann. §§ 34A-2-101 to -1005 (2011) (Workers' Compensation Act); id. § 34A-2-108(5) (providing an exemption from the Workers' Compensation Act for agricultural employers). 2 According to Peterson, he is an agricultural employer because he uses agricultural labor in the form of feeding, harvesting, and managing wildlife and livestock, see id. § 35A-4-206(1)(a) (defining agricultural labor), and his payroll for nonimmediate family members is less than $8,000 per year. See id. § 84A-2-108(5)(c)@) (providing that an agricultural employer's payroll may not exceed $8,000 to nonimmediate family members). We decline to disturb the Commission's order.

*1000 BACKGROUND

T2 Nicholas Jay Frohardt worked as a hunting guide for Peterson from August 12, 2007, to October 8, 2007, and again during the 2008 hunting season until he was injured on the job in September of that year. According to Frohardt, his duties included guiding hunters, preparing and cleaning up after their meals, setting and breaking campsites, feeding and caring for Peterson's mules and horses, pumping water to the camp, chopping firewood, and generally making the hunters' experience as pleasant as possible.

13 Peterson "is in the business of guiding sportsmen on hunting expeditions on Boobe Hole [MJountain,"' near Richfield, Utah. Boobe Hole Mountain is located on property owned by Tim Anderson and R.J. Ricken-baugh. Peterson conducts the hunting operations on Anderson's portion of Boobe Hole Mountain, consisting of 38,000 acres (the Land). Anderson testified that there are no farming operations on the Land and that it is used only as a range for his family's 135 head of cattle. Although Anderson had no personal involvement in the day-to-day hunting operations, he shared the profits equally with Peterson in exchange for allowing the hunting expeditions on the Land.

T4 Peterson uses mules and horses to transport hunters and to carry supplies and game on the Land. To ensure that the animals had an adequate supply of water, Fro-hardt constructed an irrigation pipe from a natural spring to a hunting camp on the Land. Cattle, deer, and elk also use this water source.

45 To obtain deer and elk tags to resell to the hunters each year, Peterson petitioned the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources (UDWR) to create a Cooperative Wildlife Management Unit. Each year the UDWR sent a biologist to the Land to meet with Peterson and to determine the number of deer and elk tags that could be sold. In 2007 and 2008, UDWR gave Peterson fourteen bull elk tags and eighteen buck tags. Additional tags for hunting in the unit are made available to the general public. The UDWR provided the tags to Peterson at no cost in exchange for the right of the public to hunt on the privately-owned Land.

T6 Peterson testified that he and his employees "encouraged hunters to shoot deer and elk with nonmatehing points so that bucks and bull elk with matching points could continue to produce and pass on their matching point genetic lines." However, he admitted that "hunters were not required to shoot the bucks/bull elk" that Peterson encouraged them to shoot.

T7 In 2007, Peterson paid Frohardt $4,765.19 for his services and paid another employee $3,000. Peterson also gave Fro-hardt $500, which Peterson claims was for company expenses. While Frohardt did use $50 for company supplies, he denies that Peterson instructed him to do so and contends that he was allowed to retain the remaining $450 for his personal use. In contrast, Peterson claimed that he instructed Frohardt to keep the remaining $450 for future expenses related to the hunting operation. There were no further business expenses paid by Frohardt, and Peterson never requested that Frohardt return the $450 balance.

T8 On September 18, 2008, a hunter Fro-hardt was guiding accidentally shot him, inflicting a "wound the size of a small cannon ball five inches in diameter" near the front of Frohardt's right ankle and his right heel. As a result, Frohardt underwent two surgeries and ultimately had his right leg amputated below the knee. Frohardt now uses a prosthetic limb, and due to his active lifestyle, the sockets for this prosthetic have been replaced six times. Frohardt may also require hip surgery in the future due to the additional strain "his left leg endures to balance ... the prosthetic right leg."

T9 Frohardt filed a claim for workers compensation benefits with the Commission on June 9, 2009. Peterson argued that he was exempt from providing workers compensation benefits because he was an agricultural employer that paid less than $8,000 to nonimmediate family employees in 2007 and 2008. See Utah Code Ann. § 34A-2-108(5)(c)(i) (2011). Peterson supported this argument by claiming that Frohardt's labor was agricultural under Utah Code section 35A-4-206, because it included the feeding, *1001 harvesting, and managing of wildlife and livestock. See id. § 35A-4-206(1)(@).

{10 The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) issued her "Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order" on February 9, 2010. The ALJ first found that the $450 given to Fro-hardt by Peterson was part of his wages. Accordingly, the ALJ concluded that even if Peterson was an agricultural employer, his total payroll for 2007 exceeded $8,000 and, therefore, he would not be exempt from providing workers' compensation benefits, Additionally, assuming that Peterson did not exeeed the $8,000 payroll threshold, the ALJ determined that he was not an agricultural employer because his hunting operations did not involve the feeding, raising, caring for, or management of wildlife. In reaching this decision, the ALJ rejected Peterson's argument that killing elk and deer fed Anderson's cattle by leaving more vegetation for their consumption, finding that the small number of animals killed by Peterson's hunters made no significant difference in the overall deer and elk populations. Additionally, the ALJ concluded that Peterson did not manage the deer and elk herd because even though hunters were encouraged to shoot animals with mismatched points, they were not required to do so.

11 Peterson filed a motion for review of the ALJ's decision with the Commission. Relying on the facts found by the ALJ, the Commission affirmed the decision and explained that Peterson merely "provided a guide to individuals seeking to hunt deer and elk. There is no indication that Peterson actually raised, fed or cared for the deer and elk to be hunted...." Having decided that Peterson was not an agricultural employer, the Commission did not reach the issue of whether his payroll exceeded $8,000. Peterson now appeals.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

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Bluebook (online)
2012 UT App 14, 269 P.3d 998, 700 Utah Adv. Rep. 67, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 17, 2012 WL 163835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-hunting-v-labor-commission-utahctapp-2012.