Petrol Stops Northwest v. Morgan

501 P.2d 341, 10 Or. App. 620, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 904
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 28, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 501 P.2d 341 (Petrol Stops Northwest v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petrol Stops Northwest v. Morgan, 501 P.2d 341, 10 Or. App. 620, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 904 (Or. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

*622 THORNTON, J.

This is an unemployment insurance appeal. Plaintiff, Petrol Stops Northwest, appeals from the determination of the Employment Division, upheld after hearing by a referee, finding Petrol Stops to be an “employer” subject to the Unemployment Insurance Act, ORS ch 657.

This court has initial judicial review of this contested ease. ORS 183.480. On appeal the amount of tax assessed against plaintiff pursuant to the Act is not at issue. Rather, plaintiff claims that it is not an “employer” subject to the Act, and, alternatively, plaintiff questions the constitutionality of ORS 657.040 as applied to it.

*623 Plaintiff, Petrol Stops, owns a chain of gasoline service stations in this state. Plaintiff engages station managers, under written agreement, to dispense gasoline at the stations and to handle daily operation. Petrol Stops contends that these station managers are not its employes.

The details of the contractual, and factual, relationship between Petrol Stops and its station managers may be summarized as follows: Petrol Stops owns or leases all of its stations in the state. Plaintiff also owns the gasoline-related equipment at the stations, such as the gas pumps. Plaintiff provides supplies necessary to the gasoline business, including windshield cleaning materials, and is responsible for utility bills. Petrol Stops carries over-all public liability insurance on the stations. Plaintiff also sets gasoline prices, and, by the written agreements, determines standards of merchandising and advertising. Through its area manager, plaintiff usually visits each station at least once per week. Service station hours are established in the written agreement signed by all station managers. Plaintiff can terminate the agreement either on 30-days’ notice, or without notice if the manager fads in his prescribed duties under the agreement.

The station managers may sell no gasoline other than that provided by Petrol Stops. However, other services and products, such as oil changes and soft drinks, may be sold by the managers, absent interference with the business of dispensing plaintiff’s gasoline. The only equipment and supplies owned by the managers at the stations are those related to these incidental services. Managers retain all income from these non-gasoline related services, and do not account to Petrol Stops for these' amounts. However,-under, the *624 agreements, the managers daily bank the receipts from the gasoline pumps, retaining only some portion of their “contract price” set in the agreements. If the receipts are less than the total indicated on the gasoline pumps, then the station manager is responsible for the discrepancy. Managers may hire their own “helpers” to assist at the stations. Petrol Stops has little control over these “helpers” having no power to hire or fire them. The managers set wages and conditions of employment for their “helpers” and pay tax withholding on them.

Petrol Stops used two different written agreements with its station managers during the period involved in this case. One provided for what the area manager termed a “profit-sharing situation.” Under this agreement the manager received a set amount per month plus one-half of the net profit for the month. Apparently, if the station had suffered a loss, the manager, under this agreement, also would have been responsible for one-half of the loss, although the area manager testified, “* * * why of course you couldn’t hold a guy to it * *

The second agreement, which plaintiff adopted after it began to lose both money and managers, provided for a set amount of payment per month only, with no possibility of risk of loss for the managers. Almost all of plaintiff’s managers now work under this agreement.

Some managers, perhaps under plaintiff’s prompting, felt themselves to be self-employed, and did not view their relationship with plaintiff as that of employer-employe. Others apparently disagreed with this characterization.

On these facts, the plaintiff contends that no suf *625 ficient evidence supports the finding that an employment relationship exists between Petrol Stops and its station managers. The plaintiff also asserts that the referee used an improper analysis in determining that plaintiff is an employer.

The referee, in deciding that plaintiff is an employer, looked first to ORS 657.030 which defines “employment” as “service for an employer * * * performed for remuneration * * *.” Finding these terms to be satisfied by the evidence, the referee then considered ORS 657.040, set out in n 1, supra.

This is the proper analysis, and the referee clearly followed it. Golden Shear Barber Shop v. Morgan, 258 Or 105, 481 P2d 624 (1971); Kirkpatrick v. Peet, 247 Or 204, 428 P2d 405 (1967).

Plaintiff, however, then asserts that, in fact, the provisions of ORS 657.030 were not satisfied, and that here no services were performed for an employer for remuneration.

Under ORS 657.030, “* * * the question of whether certain facts are sufficient to support an administrative finding that a certain legal relationship exists is a question of law which the court itself must decide.” Kirkpatrick v. Peet, supra, 247 Or at 211; Golden Shear Barber Shop v. Morgan, supra.

Traditionally, the terms “service” and “remuneration” contained in ORS 657.030 have received a broad construction, designed to effectuate the remedial purposes of the Unemployment Insurance Act. Journal Pub. Co. v. State U. C. Com., 175 Or 627, 155 P2d 570 (1945); Kirkpatrick v. Peet, supra. The courts have not attempted an exact delineation of either term, for, as the Supreme Court said in the Journal case, “* * * *626 it -would be impracticable, in our opinion, to attempt a definition by which to test every case that may arise * • 175 Or at 636.

Here, the facts seem to fall rather clearly within the ambit of “service” and “remuneration.” The plaintiff set the operating hours and gas prices at its stations. It provided the property, equipment and supplies for the gasoline business. Petrol Stops controlled the advertising, merchandising and general operation of the station.

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501 P.2d 341, 10 Or. App. 620, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petrol-stops-northwest-v-morgan-orctapp-1972.