State Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Brown

358 P.2d 502, 225 Or. 306, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 711
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 358 P.2d 502 (State Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Brown) 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. Brown, 358 P.2d 502, 225 Or. 306, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 711 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

KING, J.

(Pro Tempore)

This is an action brought by the State Unemployment Compensation Commission of Oregon against the defendant, Elwood M. Brown, doing business as Brown’s Barber Shop, for unpaid payroll contributions for the last three quarters of 1956, for all of 1957 and 1958.

The case was heard by a jury in the Circuit Court of Washington county, Oregon, and verdict was returned for the defendant.

Motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict *308 was filed and granted by the court and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff as prayed for in its complaint. From that judgment the defendant brings this appeal.

The defendant makes only one assignment of error, to-wit:

“The trial court erred in allowing plaintiff’s motion for judgment non obstante verdicto, there being substantial evidence to support the verdict of the jury.”

The defendant in this case was the owner and operator of Brown’s Barber Shop located on Highway 217 just north of Tigard, Oregon. There are three barber chairs in the shop. The defendant personally operates chair No. 1 and used an oral lease, or rental arrangement, on the other two chairs with other barbers.

The State’s witnesses corroborated the defendant who testified that the oral lease arrangement was as follows:

“They were to have a chair and water and lights and heat and shaving lotions and soap, and a portion of the barber shop for their own customers. In return, why they paid on their rent twenty-five per cent, or one-fourth of what they took in during the day.
ÍÉ* % * * *
“They collected and made their own change, and then at the end of the day, why they paid up the rent for that day and kept the rest of the money they took in.”

He further testified that the barbers each counted their own cash intake and he made no check of it; they worked about as they liked. Each barber listed himself as self-employed on his Federal Income Tax re *309 turns. Each barber had many of his own patrons who would wait for him, in addition to caring for members of the general public who had no special choice of barber. The barbers furnished their own equipment such as razors, shears, combs, etc.

The defendant furnished the heat, light, hot water, power for their electric equipment, the license, and furniture for the waiting space which was used by all customers. No particular time notice was required before a barber would quit or was asked to quit. The general posted prices were charged by all the barbers. General insurance on the premises, both fire and public liability, was carried by the defendant.

The witnesses for the State testified to substantially the same facts as did the defendant, Mr. Brown. In this regard there was no dispute or disagreement.

When the facts testified to are not materially at variance and the decision involves only a question of law based upon those facts, and no presumptions or inferences can be deducted therefrom, there is nothing for the jury to decide. It merely becomes a question of law for the court. Farley v. Portland Gas & Coke Co., 203 Or 635, 280 P2d 384; Clarke-Woodward D. Co. v. Hot Lake S. Co., 75 Or 234, 146 P 135; Squires v. Modern Brotherhood, 68 Or 336, 347, 135 P 774, 778; Coffin v. Hutchinson, 22 Or 554, 557, 30 P 424.

Would the facts as testified to by the defendant and his witness, conceding them to be true, be sufficient to relieve or excuse the defendant from complying with the provisions of the Oregon Unemployment Compensation Law? We believe not, as will be pointed out.

It is conceded that he did not make the required reports and he would be liable for the amounts prayed for in the complaint unless he is exempt from the Act’s *310 provisions. The provisions of the Act applying to this case were as follows:

ORS 657.025—“* * * ‘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 commissioner 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.”

A number of cases involving various types of employment have been decided by this court and the Unemployment Compensation Act has been pretty thoroughly interpreted.

In the case of Journal Pub. Co. v. State U. C. Corn., 175 Or 627, 635, 155 P2d 570, whieh held the Journal distributors were under the Act, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Lusk, made a comprehensive analyses of the Act and its scope. Speaking of coverage of the Act he says:

“We have heretofore held that the test of coverage under the law is whether a ease falls within the statutory definitions, which are ‘broader than the scope of the employer-employee relation or that *311 of master and servant as those terms are known to the common law.’ Rahoutis v. Unemployment Compensation Commission, 171 Or. 93, 113, 136 P. (2d) 426; Singer Sewing Machine Company v. State Unemployment Compensation Commission, 167 Or. 142, 149, 164, 176, 103 P. (2d) 708, 116 P. (2d) 744, 138 A.L.R. 1398. The Rahoutis case is also authority for the proposition (which follows from the plain terms of the law) that, once it is shown that the individual has performed services for remuneration for an employer, the burden is cast upon the one who claims that such individual is not under the act to satisfy the commission that he comes within the exceptions provided in § 126-702 (f), (E), O.C.L.A. (171 Or. 119).”

The above case also holds that the Unemployment Compensation law is remedial and should be liberally construed.

In the very recent case of Unemployment Comp. Com. v. Bates,

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Bluebook (online)
358 P.2d 502, 225 Or. 306, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-unemployment-compensation-commission-v-brown-or-1960.