State Industrial Accident Commission v. Eggiman

139 P.2d 565, 172 Or. 19, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 79
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 139 P.2d 565 (State Industrial Accident Commission v. Eggiman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Industrial Accident Commission v. Eggiman, 139 P.2d 565, 172 Or. 19, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 79 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, the State Industrial Accident Commission, from a judgment for the defendant entered in this action which was instituted by the commission for the purpose of recovering from the defendant, the alleged employer of Leonard Johnson, $1,096.85, being the sum which the plaintiff paid to Johnson on account of an injury which he suffered while helping to fell a tree upon land owned by the defendant..

It is agreed that the defendant had not notified the plaintiff, prior to Johnson’s injury, that he (defendant) elected not to contribute to the industrial accident fund for the work in which Johnson was engaged at the time of his injury. It is also agreed that the defendant ordered felled the tree upon which Johnson was working at the time of his injury.

The plaintiff (appellant) presents only two assignments of error. The issues which they raise are: (a) Was Johnson the defendant’s (respondent’s) employee ; and (b) was the business in which the defendant was engaged (1) logging; (2) work incidental to farming; or (3) both.

■ The plaintiff, in seeking to hold the defendant liable for reimbursement to it for the sum it paid to Johnson, contends that at the time of Johnson’s injury the defendant was engaged in two vocations: (a) General farming and dairying; and (b) the wood business: felling trees, cutting them into firewood and selling the latter. It further contends that at that time Johnson was the defendant’s employee in the wood business. *21 The defendant, npon the .other hand, contends that. (1) Johnson was not his employee, but was the employee of one Walter Hornshuh, who, as an independent contractor, was cutting about 100 cords of firewood for the defendant upon the latter’s farm; and (2) the work in which Hornshuh was engaged on behalf of the defendant was within the purview of § 102-1727, O. C. L. A., which says:

“Farming, and all work incidental thereto, is a nonhazardous occupation * * *. Farming means the cultivating of land, dairy, * * * and operations incidental thereto; also, when incidental thereto, * * * land clearing with or without blasting, wood sawing, wood cutting, * * * whether or not such operations are carried on by the owner of the farm, the person operating it or by any other person. * * * None of the occupations enumerated by sections 102-1725 and 102-1736 shall be deemed hazardous when conducted by a farmer incidental to his farming operation. ’ ’

Section 102-1725, O. C. L. A., says:

“The hazardous occupations to which this act is applicable are as follows: * * * (c) Logging, lumbering or ’* ” *; * * * land clearing with blasting * * V’

Section 102-1736, O. C. L. A., which states the time when employers “subject to this act” must remit to the commission, has application to this case only in the event that the defendant’s operations were nonagricultural.

The facts are free from dispute and present the situation which we shall now describe. Since 1904, with the exception of a five-year period, the defendant lived upon a tract of land comprising 92 acres which is situated about three miles from Oregon City. In 1926 *22 he purchased the place. Fifty-five of the acres are in cultivation, 17 contain a stand of timber and the remainder is stump land. He owns 18 cows which he pastures upon this land. The findings of fact, referring to the time of Johnson’s injury, say:

“Said defendant at said time was a farmer, and his principal occupation was farming and dairying.”

We concur in that finding.

Since 1926 a neighboring farmer of the defendant, being the aforementioned Walter Hornshuh, annually cut for the defendant approximately 100 cords of wood off the defendant’s land. He felled the trees and cut most of the wood into cordwood. The work was done in the winter months, and the following fall the defendant sold and delivered the cordwood to customers in Oregon City. Hornshuh cut some of the wood into 16-inch lengths; this was used by the defendant in his home. Generally, Hornshuh was compensated at the rate of $1.25 per cord. In the felling of the trees Hornshuh used a helper. In March, 1940, he secured the services of the aforementioned Leonard Johnson who lived with his parents upon an adjacent farm.

March 28, 1940, while Johnson was helping Hornshuh fell a tree he sustained the injury for which the plaintiff later paid him the sum which it seeks to recover from the defendant, $1,096.85. The payment was made pursuant to a claim which stated that the defendant was the employer and that the work consisted of “felling trees.”

As trees were felled the defendant cleared the ground of all underbrush and sowed it with grass seed, thereby providing additional pasture for his cows. The defendant, in stating the reason for cutting the wood, *23 said: “The main reason was to get more pasture.” He swore that “dairying and general farming” was the kind of work in which he was engaged, and added that he increased his dairying activities as he cleared the timber off more and more of his land. The following is taken from the testimony given by him upon cross-examination :

“Q. So in addition to your dairy business you did have a little wood business on top of it, didn’t you?
“A. Yes, sir.
“ Q. You kind of killed two birds with one stone, and thus got more land cleared and at the same time made a little money out of wood to help pay the taxes, is that about it?
‘ ‘ A. That is right. ’ ’

We quote further from the record:

“The Court: What is your principal work out there ?
‘ ‘ A. Right now it is dairying.
“The Court: Well, I mean when this matter happened and before, — prior thereto.
“A. Oh, I was cutting wood and hauling and farming.
“The Court: Well, now, was your principal business cutting and selling wood, or was it farming?
“A. Well, if we had a poor year, the wood was the best, and if you had a good year, the farming was the best. It depends on the crops.
TP TP TP
“The Court: 1940, yes. When this wood operation started that year and right back in ’39 when this agreement was had, what was your principal occupation out there?
“A. Dairying.”

*24 We quote further from his testimony:

“A. Oh, I raised about five or six acres of wheat, and the balance was oats and vetch and a little corn and potatoes.
“The Court: Have any pigs?
"A. One or two, for my own use.
"The Court: Did you sell milk on the market?
"A. I had a retail route.

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Bluebook (online)
139 P.2d 565, 172 Or. 19, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-industrial-accident-commission-v-eggiman-or-1943.