Rommae Hayes v. Ginger C, LLC and Treasurer of The State of Missouri, Custodian of The Second Injury Fund

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
DocketWD82256
StatusPublished

This text of Rommae Hayes v. Ginger C, LLC and Treasurer of The State of Missouri, Custodian of The Second Injury Fund (Rommae Hayes v. Ginger C, LLC and Treasurer of The State of Missouri, Custodian of The Second Injury Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rommae Hayes v. Ginger C, LLC and Treasurer of The State of Missouri, Custodian of The Second Injury Fund, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District ROMMAE HAYES, ) ) Appellant, ) WD82256 ) v. ) OPINION FILED: ) September 3, 2019 GINGER C, LLC AND TREASURER ) OF THE STATE OF MISSOURI, ) CUSTODIAN OF THE SECOND ) INJURY FUND, ) ) Respondents. )

Appeal from the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission

Before Division One: Cynthia L. Martin, Presiding Judge, Victor C. Howard, Judge and Alok Ahuja, Judge

Rommae Hayes ("Hayes") appeals from the Labor and Industrial Relations

Commission's ("Commission") final award denying his claim for workers' compensation

benefits. Hayes asserts that the Commission's denial of benefits was erroneous because:

(1) the overwhelming weight of the evidence established that, at the time of his accident,

Ginger C, LLC ("Ginger C") was a construction industry employer having at least one

employee or alternatively an employer with five or more employees, and that Hayes was an employee of Ginger C; and (2) the overwhelming weight of the evidence established

that a statutory employment relationship existed between Hayes and Ginger C. Finding no

error, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural History

Nakhle Asmar ("Asmar") is the owner of Ginger C. Ginger C owns houses and

apartments that it rents to students, low-income residents, and veterans in the Columbia,

Missouri area. Ginger C's sole source of income is rent paid by tenants.

In February 2013, Hayes was released from prison on an early release program, and

lived at Reality House in Columbia, Missouri. Hayes was required to be employed at least

forty hours a week. Another Reality House resident, Weston Magee ("Magee"), performed

renovation, repair, and maintenance work on Ginger C's rental properties. Hayes's parole

officer asked Magee to assist Hayes in obtaining a job with Ginger C. Hayes had forty

years of experience in construction, including experience paving and performing concrete

and highway work.

Hayes began performing renovation, repair, and maintenance on Ginger C's rental

properties in April 2013. Asmar testified that Ginger C does not undertake to perform any

construction work beyond renovating, repairing, or conducting maintenance on its own

rental properties. Asmar testified that in 2013, Ginger C used independent contractors to

perform this work. Asmar testified that he advised persons hired to work on Ginger C's

rental properties that they were independent contractors working by the job. Ginger C

issued 1099 forms to persons hired to perform renovation, repair, or maintenance work on

its rental properties, and did not withhold taxes from checks paid for work performed.

2 Ginger C did not provide health insurance, vacation days, or sick leave to any of the persons

hired to perform renovation, repair, or maintenance work on its rental properties.

Asmar testified that Hayes was not always available to perform renovation, repair,

or maintenance work on Ginger C's rental properties because Hayes worked independently

on other properties, including projects in Moberly. Asmar testified that when Hayes was

available, Hayes would either submit a bid for work that needed to be performed, or he

would bill Ginger C at an hourly rate. Asmar testified that if Hayes did not first bid for a

job, Hayes received $12 per hour, plus the cost of any materials provided. Ginger C also

reimbursed Hayes for the use of his personal truck. Asmar testified that he received all

calls for maintenance from Ginger C's tenants, and that he would direct maintenance calls

to various independent contractors, including Hayes. Asmar testified that Hayes was not

obligated to accept a request to perform maintenance work. Asmar testified that Hayes

always provided his own tools, and that if Hayes needed a tool to perform work for Ginger

C, it would be purchased for him with the cost deducted from Hayes's check.

Hayes testified that Asmar did not tell him he was an independent contractor, or that

he worked job to job. Hayes testified that at the beginning of his employment relationship

with Ginger C, he was paid $10 per hour and worked at least forty hours per week. Hayes

testified that after two weeks on the job, Ginger C increased his pay to $12 per hour and

compensated him for the use of his truck. Hayes testified that Asmar would pay him every

Friday by check for work completed during the week, and that Asmar would write another

check on Monday morning for work completed by Hayes on Saturday and Sunday. Hayes

testified that he "never missed a week" of work with Ginger C. Hayes produced no pay

3 stubs in support of his claims about the amount he was paid per hour or about the number

of hours worked, though he claimed they were available.

Hayes testified that the work he did for Ginger C ranged from changing light bulbs

to fully renovating rental properties. Hayes explained that Asmar would call him every

morning to tell him what work needed to be done on Ginger C's rental properties before

meeting Hayes and other workers at a local hardware store to buy the materials needed.

Hayes testified that, while he had "simple tools" from his forty years in the construction

industry, he did not have all of the tools necessary for the work he did for Ginger C. Hayes

confirmed that Asmar would purchase any tools he needed from a local hardware store and

that the cost of these tools were deducted from his weekly checks.

Hayes testified that Asmar never told Hayes how to do work he was asked to

perform, and that Asmar relied on Hayes to assess each job to determine whether he was

qualified to perform requested work. Hayes claimed that over time, he began receiving

maintenance calls directly from Ginger C's tenants and that he began carrying the keys to

all of Ginger C's properties.

In June 2013, Ginger C purchased a triplex at 1500 Hinkson in Columbia ("Hinkson

property"). The Hinkson property required repairs, including replacement of the concrete

basement floor, before it could be rented to tenants. Ginger C solicited a bid from

Columbia Maintenance Company for the concrete work. Hayes and Roland Nabhan

("Nabhan")1 (Asmar's brother-in-law who also did renovation, maintenance, and repair

1 The transcript of the hearing before the Administrative Law Judge indicates that Nabhan's named is spelled "Nabahan," but in a deposition entered into evidence, Nabhan spelled his last name as "N-a-b-h-a-n" for the court reporter. We use the spelling provided by Nabhan himself.

4 work for Ginger C) learned of the quote, and offered to perform the work for less than

Columbia Maintenance Company's bid. Asmar testified that "Hayes claimed to be an

expert in concrete laying and he said, 'We can do a much better job much cheaper for you,'"

without giving a more precise bid. Nabhan's testimony supported Asmar's recollection.

Nabhan testified that Asmar solicited a bid from "somebody else," but that he and Hayes

said they could do the job for cheaper. Hayes testified to a different version of events, and

claimed that Nabhan told Asmar, "No, no. Don't you do that. We're going to do it now."

Hayes testified that he and Magee "griped about it" because neither had the skills necessary

to perform concrete work.

On June 26, 2013, Nabhan arranged for the delivery of concrete and necessary tools

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