Ryan v. Department of Taxation

8 N.W.2d 393, 242 Wis. 491, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 233
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 8 N.W.2d 393 (Ryan v. Department of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. Department of Taxation, 8 N.W.2d 393, 242 Wis. 491, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 233 (Wis. 1943).

Opinions

Rosenberry, C. J.

The sole question involved is whether the moneys received by the plaintiff from the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation and the Federal Home Loan Bank Board were paid to him as an employee or as an independent contractor.

*493 The following is a condensed statement of the facts in this case : The plaintiff is a practicirig lawyer and a member of the firm of Schubring, Ryan & Petersen, of Madison, Wisconsin. In August, 1936, Mr. Horace Russell, general counsel for the Federal Plome Loan Bank Board and for the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation and the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation, two corporations under that board, was sent to Wisconsin to ascertain the best method of handling certain Wisconsin litigation. Mr. Russell interviewed a number- of attorneys in Milwaukee and then came to- Madison and interviewed Mr. Ryan. As a result of that interview, Mr. Ryan was employed by the federal agencies to handle the litigation. The Federal Savings & Loan, Insurance Corporation adopted a resolution, the material part of which is as follows:

“Be it resolved, That William Ryan, Madison, Wisconsin, be and he is hereby employed ... to represent the defendants in the case of the state of Wisconsin. . . . Said employment is on the basis of $833.33 per month with the understanding that said sum will be paid for at least three months. It is understood that said William Ryan will give so much of his time as may be necessary in said litigation, but it is understood that full time will not be required.”

This resolution was adopted August 21, 1936, and on the next day, Mr. Russell advised Mr. Ryan to that effect, and he immediately commenced representation of the federal agencies.

What Mr. Ryan did in the course of his employment and the nature of the services rendered by him may best be stated by a condensation of the testimony of Mr. Russell, general counsel for the agencies. He said:

“All employees of the United States are required to take an oath of office which was true of this corporation, which was wholly owned by the United States. Both the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and the two corporations under its direction provided transportation to employees under standardized gpv-ernment travel regulations. The facilities afforded Mr. Ryan were the same as afforded other employees of the department. *494 . . . Plome Owners’ Loan Corporation did employ lawyers on an independent contractor basis. These attorneys were not required to take an oath of office and were not provided any travel or sustenance. ...
“Mr. Ryan worked under my immediate direction and under the direction of the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation, acting through its board of trustees. In the detail of the work I conferred with him before he was employed and for a year after talked to him by telephone from time to time, gave directions as to what we were going to do in the state court case that was pending at that time and as to the institution of suit in the United States court, and as to the detail of the conduct of that litigation.' Pie in turn submitted to- me the work that he did and it was reviewed in my office. That work was carried to the board from time to time. The board discussed the progress of this case, it being one of the most important that the board was concerned with. The board gave" me directions and I in turn passed them on to Mr. Ryan. The relationship was the same as the relationship between me and other employees of that staff who were employed in like manner and worked in like manner.
“After the initial conference with Mr. Ryan I drafted or caused to- be drafted a proposed complaint. We sent that material to Mr. Ryan for his- advice. He drafted a complaint, sent it to us, we reviewed it, and finally he sent us his final revision here and we made some changes in it and sent it directly from Washington to Mr. Wallace Reiss, local counsel for Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation at Milwaukee. He secured the proper signatures and sent it on to Mr. Ryan and he filed the bill. I made suggestion as to the seeking of relief by way of declaratory judgment. I was. much more concerned with the validity of the statute than I was with this one association. . . .
“As to suggestions or instructions with reference to the manner of handling of the briefs or contents thereof, I conferred with Mr. Ryan as I did with other members of the staff constantly and agreed with him as to the course the case would •take. He agreed that I would devote the principal portion of my briefs to certain questions involved and he would devote a certain major portion of his brief to other questions. . . .
*495 “The correspondence with Mr. Ryan dealt with the major problems of policy and the details of litigation, if not minor details, such as when the bill was drafted. Mr. Ryan after much negotiation had prepared his final draft and my staff and I made some changes in it in Washington before it was filed, some minor changes. As to the extensiveness of my contacts with Mr. Ryan I believe I was in his office before he was employed. I was in court with him at Superior on the preliminary hearing. I was in court with him at Madison when it was tried. I was in court with him at Chicago before the United States circuit court of appeals for the 7th circuit. He was in my office in Washington one or two times. I talked to him by telephone repeatedly. These personal contacts and telephone conversations dealt with detail of the handling of the work. I was responsible immediately to the board and kept up with all of the details. I think I performed all my duties by keeping up with it and by giving Mr. Ryan direction as to any detail that seemed to me to require any direction at all. . . .
“Before the circuit court of appeals in Chicago I made the complete argument on one constitutional ground and handled that in detail. Mr. Ryan on the other hand, handled certain other phases of the argument in detail. Mr. Ryan did not handle in his brief the matters I handled in detail in my arguments. I had conferred with him and my decision was that it was better for me to handle one phase of it and for him to handle the other completely and he handled the other as directed.”

From the testimony it appears that Mr. Ryan attended to some of the details in the litigation on his own initiative and without direction, for instance, he signed a stipulation extending the time for pleading; he granted an extension of time for submission of proposed findings to the United States district judge; he drafted findings of fact for submission to’ the district court; he signed a stipulation for substitution of the attorney general of Wisconsin, elected during the progress of the case; and he arranged for a stipulation extending the time for filing briefs in the circuit court of appeals.

*496 The plaintiff was paid semimonthly by check at the contract rate from August 21, 1936, until May 1, 1937, when the rate was reduced to' $300 per month.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W.2d 393, 242 Wis. 491, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-department-of-taxation-wis-1943.