Ruble v. Arctic General, Inc.

598 P.2d 95, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 532
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1979
Docket3710
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 598 P.2d 95 (Ruble v. Arctic General, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruble v. Arctic General, Inc., 598 P.2d 95, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 532 (Ala. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

In June 1975, appellant Roy Ruble was working on the state funded Airport Road Extension Project in Fairbanks, Alaska. Ruble sustained injuries when the belly plate of a road scraper which he was operating became disengaged, causing the vehicle to come to an abrupt halt. He brought a tort action against Arctic General, Inc. (hereinafter “Arctic”), the owner-lessor of the road scraper; contending that Arctic was negligent in maintaining the machine. The superior court, acting on Arctic’s and Ruble’s cross-motions for summary judgment, dismissed Ruble’s complaint, on the ground that he was an employee of Arctic and hence limited to his remedies under workers’ compensation. AS 23.30.055. Ruble has appealed this dismissal. We affirm the judgment of the superior court.

On May 30, 1975, JIJ Nelson, Joint Venture (hereinafter “JIJ”), the contractor for the highway project, entered into an agreement with Arctic for the use of several pieces of road equipment. The agreement called for Arctic to maintain the equipment and supply operators. Accordingly, Ruble was dispatched from the union hiring hall to work for Arctic. He was put on Arctic’s payroll and instructed in the use of the road scrapers by Bud LaFon, a part-owner of Arctic. Sometime in the next few days the state asked JIJ either to put Arctic’s operators on its payroll or to make Arctic a subcontractor, in order to comply with state and federal law. JIJ and Arctic agreed on the former, and on June 2, Ruble was transferred to the JIJ payroll. His wages, however, were remitted by Arctic to JIJ after JIJ paid the equipment rental fees specified in the May 30 agreement. Ruble also continued to be accountable to and supervised by LaFon.

As a result of the accident, Ruble was dismissed from his job on June 16. 1 Three weeks later, he filed a workers’ compensation claim against JIJ, and received benefits under that claim. In September, he began the action which is the subject of this appeal.

Both parties discuss at great length the various tests that we have used in the past to determine whether a person was an employee for workers’ compensation purposes. 2 *97 Those tests, however, were designed to differentiate employees from independent contractors, and have not proved useful here, where the question is whose employee Ruble was, rather than whether or not he was an employee at all.

In his text on workers’ compensation law, Professor Larson discusses factors to be considered in determining the employer in situations involving joint employers and joint employment. According to Larson, a special employer 3 such as JIJ, becomes liable for workers’ compensation only if the employee, here Ruble, has made a contract of hire, express or implied, with the special employer, the work being done is essentially that of the special employer, and the special employer has the right to control the details of the work. 4 In the usual case involving multiple employers, the employee is seeking to hold a particular employer liable for workers’ compensation. 5 In such cases, the liberal purpose of the workers’ compensation act, to benefit the employee, 6 and the presumption that a claim comes within the provisions of the act 7 apply. In this case, however, an employee is seeking to hold the “general employer” liable as a third party. When an employee, who has coverage under the compensation act, seeks to hold his original employer liable as a third party, policy considerations are more evenly balanced. Thus, there are neither presumptions for or against finding tort liability on behalf of the third party, nor presumptions for or against finding an employment relation with respect to a particular employer. 8

The issue before us quite simply, is whether the evidence presented indicates that the initially established employment relation between Arctic and Ruble had terminated at the time of Ruble’s injury. Applying the Larson tests, it does not appear that Ruble entered into a contract of hire, express or implied, with JIJ. 9 The work *98 was benefitting both Arctic and JIJ and was not essentially for JIJ any more than for Arctic, and all control was exercised by Arctic through LaFon, although JIJ had a right to designate the type and location of work to be performed by the scraper.

There is no dispute that Ruble was an Arctic employee until June 2, 1975. What effect, then, did his transfer to the JIJ payroll have? LaFon testified in his deposition that neither JIJ nor Arctic contemplated any significant change because of the payroll switch, 10 and no modifications were made to the written agreement. Arctic, by reimbursing JIJ, was, in reality, still paying Ruble’s full salary after the transfer. Professor Larson states:

The element of who pays the employee shrinks into comparative insignificance in lent-employee problems, because the net result is almost invariably that the special employer ultimately pays for the services received and the employee ultimately gets his wages. But whether the special employer pays the general employer who in turn pays the employee, which is the typical procedure in the Manpower-type cases, or whether the special employer pays the employee direct, the difference for present purposes is one of mechanics and not of substance. Of course, if this is not so — that is, if either the general employer or the special employer pays the employee and is not reimbursed — the fact of payment is strong evidence that the payor is the employer. 11

According to Larson, the factor that seems to play the largest part in lent-employee cases is that of furnishing heavy equipment. 12 He cites many cases holding that a general employer furnishing operators and equipment continues to be regarded as the employer when the employee is injured. 13 Discussing the “right to control” factor, Larson states:

[T]he majority of the decisions have been influenced by the arguments both that the general employer would naturally reserve the control necessary to ensure that his equipment is properly used, and that a substantial part of any such operator’s duties would consist of the continuing duty of maintenance of the equipment. 14

We believe that these factors are persuasive here. The lease between Arctic and JIJ involved six pieces of heavy earth-moving equipment which Arctic agreed to operate and maintain. Arctic also retained the authority to see that its equipment was properly used and not abused. 15

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Bluebook (online)
598 P.2d 95, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruble-v-arctic-general-inc-alaska-1979.