STATE Ex HERBERT v WHIMS

38 N.E.2d 596, 68 Ohio App. 39, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 136, 22 Ohio Op. 110, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 755
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1941
DocketNo 3314
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 38 N.E.2d 596 (STATE Ex HERBERT v WHIMS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE Ex HERBERT v WHIMS, 38 N.E.2d 596, 68 Ohio App. 39, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 136, 22 Ohio Op. 110, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 755 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

OPINION

By GEIGER, PJ.

The action involves an appeal from the judgment of the Court below based upon a verdict of the jury finding in favor of the plaintiff, Thomas J. Herbert, Attorney General, on behalf of Grover Williamson in the sum of $1002.29.

The action was brought by the Attorney General under favor of §1465-74, providing for the redress of an employee when the employer has failed to comply with the Industrial Commission Act. This section provides in substance that any employee whose employer has failed to comply with the provisions of §1465-69, who has been injured in the course of employment may, in lieu of proceeding against his employer by civil action as provided by the preceding section, file his application with the Commission for compensation, and the Commission shall hear such application in like manner as other claims and shall make an award as if such employer had complied with the provisions of §1465-69. In the event of the failure of the employer to pay such compensation, the same shall constitute a liquidated claim for damages in the amount so fixed by *138 the Commission and the Commission shall certify the same to the Attorney General who shall institute a civil action for the collection of such award. In such action it shall be sufficient for plaintiff to set forth a copy of the record of the proceedings of the Commission relative to such claims as certified by the Commission and to state that there is due to plaintiff a specified sum.

“A certified copy of such record of proceedings in such claim shall be attached to the petition and shall constitute ‘prima facie’ evidence of the truth of the facts therein contained.”

The Act provides for the filing of other pleadings and that as soon as the issues are made the case shall be advanced. The amount recovered in such action from such employer shall be paid into the State Insurance Fund.

The petition alleges that on the 18th of March, 1940, the Commission made an award against the defendant, Jackson D. Whims, in favor of Grover Williamson, which was duly certified and a copy attached. The petition alleges there is due the plaintiff the amount of $1002.29.

To this petition was attached a certified copy of the finding and order of the Commission.

The defendant answered admitting that the Commission made the finding and award, but denied all other allegations, and says that on or about June 16, 1939, the only person employed by him for farm labor upon his farm was Grover C. Williamson, and that he did not have in his employ any other person or persons at or about said time.

Sec. 1465 provides that the term ‘employee’ shall be construed to mean every person in the service of an employer employing three or more workmen regularly in the same business under any contract for hire, express or implied.

The evidence discloses that Jackson D. Whims is a farmer of Franklin County operating about 400 acres in Franklin ' County. He employed the plaintiff , to do general farm work on one of his farms of 220 acres. The plaintiff was employed by him on two separate occasions, first beginning in 1933 and terminating in 1936, at varying compensation during that period. He was re-employed in 1939. During the early part of that summer Mr. Williamson while milking a cow was struck in the eye by the cow’s swishing tail, and his sight seriously impaired. Thereupon Williamson quit the employ, as did his sons.

The definite defense is made that Williamson was the only person employed by Whims, it being claimed that Williamson was an independent contractor and that while his three boys worked with him on Whims’ farm at the time of the accident they were as a matter of fact not working for Whims, but working for their father Williamson, and that therefore Whims did not have in his employ at that time three or more operatives.

We have carefully read the record in this matter and readily arrive at the conclusion from the testimony of Grover Williamson, the father of Kenneth, Chester and Paul Williamson, three of the sons, as well as from the statement made by the defendant Whims, that the sons of Grover Williamson, at least during the last period of employment, when they had all but one reached the age of majority, and two were married, were working as employees of Whims and not as employees of their father. Whims was accustomed to pay the entire compensation, which during the latter period of employment was $125.00 per month, to the father with instructions to divide it between the boys, but nevertheless there is sufficient evidence to justify the jury in finding that the boys were employed for farm work by Whims nothwithstanding the payment of the compensation in a lump sum to the father.

The case of Industrial Commission v Laird, 126 Oh St 617, holds that the law indulges no presumption that an employee is either a servant or an independent contractor and the burden is upon the party having the affirmative *139 to show the relation to be such as to entitle him to recover. Where the claim is made on one side that the party injured was an employee and on the other side that he was not an employee but an independent contractor, the burden is upon the claimant to. prove by the greater weight of the evidence that he was such employee at the time of the injury. If the claimant offers some testimony tending to prove at the time of the injury that he was an employee, the issue should be submitted to the jury under proper instructions and failure to do so constitutes error.

“The vital test in determining whether a person employed to do certain work is an independent contractor or a mere servant, is the right of control over the work reserved by the employer.”

In the case at bar the employer testifies that he controlled the work and further all of the boys testified that they reported to Whims daily for instructions as to what he wished done and followed those instructions. There is no claim made in the evidence that the father to the exclusion of the landowner claimed a right of control over the work done by his sons. The testimony is clear that upon the second engagement by the landowner of the father, when the boys had reached majority, the father told Whims that the boys were at liberty to exercise their own judgment as to whether they should go back to the farm or continue in the work in which they were then 'severally engaged, free from any connection with the father. We, therefore, find that at the time of the accident, three or more workmen were regularly employed in the farming enterprise, each under a separate contract.

The next question raised is the claim that the provisions of §1465-74, that “a certified copy of such record of proceedings in such claim shall be attached to the petition and shall constitute prima facie evidence of the truth of the facts therein contained” are unconstitutional.

Counsel for defendant urge that this section places the burden upon the defendant to overcome the finding of the Commission, whereas the burden should be upon the plaintiff to establish all the facts essential to his recovery by a preponderance of the evidence, and that this violates the Constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E.2d 596, 68 Ohio App. 39, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 136, 22 Ohio Op. 110, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-herbert-v-whims-ohioctapp-1941.