State Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Bates

341 P.2d 119, 217 Or. 121
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 341 P.2d 119 (State Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Bates) 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 Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Bates, 341 P.2d 119, 217 Or. 121 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the State Unemployment Compensation Commission from a judgment which the circuit court entered in favor of the defendant, Walter E. Bates, after it had sustained the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The commission, which avers that the defendant is an employer within the meaning of ORS 657.025, instituted this action to recover from him sums which it says are due to it as employer contributions under the Unemployment Compensation Act, *123 ORS chapter 657. The primary issue submitted by the appeal is whether the various workmen, such as lathers, plumbers and roofers, who performed work in constructing houses for the defendant are his employees, as the commission avers, or are independent contractors, as the defendant claims.

The following are the sections of the Unemployment Compensation Act which are material to the issues before us:

ORS 657.025 (1) “* * * ‘employer’ means any employing unit which * * * employs two or more individuals in an employment subject to this chapter in any one day in each of six separate weeks during any calendar quarter in any calendar year during which its total payroll amounts to $1,800 or more for such year. * * *”
ORS 657.030 “* * * ‘employment’ means service for an employer * * * performed for remuneration or under any contract of hire, written or oral, express or implied.”
ORS 657.040 “Services performed by an individual for remuneration are deemed to be employment subject to this chapter unless and until it is shown to the satisfaction of the commission that:
“(1) Such individual has been and will continue to be free from control or direction over the performance of such services, both under his contract of service and in fact; and
“(2) Such individual customarily is engaged in an independently established business of the same nature as that involved in the contract of service.”

The only evidence before the trial judge when he sustained the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict came from two witnesses produced by the commission. As transcribed, it covers only twenty pages. One of the two witnesses was an employee of the commission whose testimony was not concerned with the problem *124 submitted by tbe appeal — that is, tbe nature of tbe relationship between the defendant and those who constructed the houses. The other witness was the defendant.

The defendant testified that all of the workmen who helped construct the houses which he built performed their services “upon a contract basis.” At times the purported contracts were termed “bid proposals.” None of the instruments was introduced in evidence and their terms were not disclosed during the trial. It developed shortly that in many instances the so-called contracts were not prepared or signed until after the work had been performed. The defendant explained that circumstance by saying:

“* * * We had to have some way of proving that these men completed these contracts on strictly their own. * * * Many of these contracts in 1956 had been done, had been performed without a written form.”

According to the defendant, he supplied in most instances the material used in the construction of the houses but the workmen furnished their own tools and equipment. The defendant testified that he handed the workmen blueprints — seemingly for the purpose of guiding them in the performance of their work. The defendant admitted that the men were permitted to depart from the blueprints if they obtained the defendant’s or his wife’s approval. The defendant’s testimony indicates that the workmen, for the most part, served regularly over long periods of time. By way of illustration he said:

“* * * The same floor layer laid floors for me for 10 years — 15 years on a contract basis.”

He thought that “a day to two or three weeks” was re *125 quired for the completion of the undertakings, depending upon the nature of the work.

According to the defendant, he could not terminate upon his own volition any of the so-called contracts. He testified:

“* * * They would have to complete the job, or if I were to terminate them during the course of the contract, I would be liable for the full amount of that contract to them as independent contractors. That would be my understanding of it. * * *”

The fact that he was the one who furnished the materials seemingly caused him to be asked:

“But if you were dissatisfied, you could stop their supplies?”

to which he answered:

“No. That would be just cutting my own throat. * * *11

The record, as we have said, does not include a copy of the purported “contracts” into which the defendant and the workmen entered, nor does it disclose the terms of those papers. The defendant, however, swore that the men were not paid upon an hourly basis. He said that they were paid:

“By a piece or by a job basis.
“They were paid by the job. We broke each job down, or each unit down into its natural categories — phimbing, wiring, flooring, roofing — and let a contract on each specific phase of that work. * * *11

The evidence does not show that any of the workmen who rendered services to the defendant had “an independently established business” as that term is employed in OBS 657.040 (2) unless an inference to *126 that effect can be drawn from the following testimony given by the defendant:

“Q They worked for you as employes before going to the hospital?
“A Never as an employe. Always as a subcontractor, just as they worked for everyone else as a subcontractor.”

Unless the words “worked for everyone else as a subcontractor” indicate that the men had “an independently established business,” we know of nothing in the record which tends to establish that needed fact. The evidence does not reveal the name of any one except the defendant for whom any of the men worked nor does it reveal whether any of them had a shop or employees of his own who helped him perform the undertakings which the defendant termed subcontracts. It does not even indicate whether the men performed personally the defendant’s work or did it through others.

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Bluebook (online)
341 P.2d 119, 217 Or. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-unemployment-compensation-commission-v-bates-or-1959.