Sudduth v. California Employment Stabilization Commission

278 P.2d 946, 130 Cal. App. 2d 304, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1894
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1955
DocketCiv. 16269
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 278 P.2d 946 (Sudduth v. California Employment Stabilization Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sudduth v. California Employment Stabilization Commission, 278 P.2d 946, 130 Cal. App. 2d 304, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1894 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

KAUFMAN, J.

This is an appeal by Charles W. Sudduth from a judgment of the Superior Court in and for the County of San Francisco in favor of respondent California Employment Stabilization Commission and the members thereof after trial by the court. Plaintiff and appellant filed this action for the recovery of taxes in the sum of $4,874.85, plus accrued interest, paid under protest pursuant to the California Unemployment Insurance Act for the period April 1, 1948, through June 30,1951. It is conceded that appellant exhausted his administrative remedies prior to filing suit.

Sudduth, who was the owner, of the Kirby Company in Sacramento, which sold and distributed Kirby Vacuum Cleaners, contended that an independent contractor status existed between himself and certain salesmen or dealers engaged by him to sell Kirby Vacuum Cleaners to the general public. The commission contended that those persons were employees and the tax contributions under the Unemployment Insurance Act were payable by appellant upon their earnings.

At the trial, the referee’s transcript of the administrative *306 hearings was received in evidence. Attached to the answer were Exhibits A and B Tax Decisions 1523 and 1600, the final decisions of the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board.

Appellant held the distributorship rights from the manufacturer of the Kirby vacuum cleaner for its sale in Sacramento and 15 counties in the central part of California. Salesmen who were designated “dealers" were engaged through newspaper advertising and personal contacts. Bach dealer entered into a written contract with appellant which was entitled “Dealer’s Agreement." This contract provided that the distributor would sell to the dealer his requirements of Kirby products, accessories, supplies, etc., at the prices set forth in the distributors’ price list at the time of delivery of the products to him.

Other principal provisions of the agreement were as follows:

“B. The Dealer will pay the Distributor cash on delivery for parts, supplies, and accessories; may either pay the Distributor cash on delivery for Kirby Cleaners and other complete devices or purchase the same on open account; and shall bear all expenses, taxes, license fees, and other charges incurred in the resale of such merchandise.
"C. The distributor will extend credit to the dealer on open account only in accordance with the Distributor’s credit system.
“D. The Dealer is and will continue to be an independent merchant and is not to be considered in any way subject to control by the Distributor. He is not and is never to be an agent or employee of the Distributor, and he shall have no power or authority to pledge or attempt to pledge or to bind or obligate the Distributor in any manner or for any purpose. The Distributor shall not furnish him with stationery, transportation, clerical or secretarial help, or office or desk space, expenses, or advertising expenses; guarantee any amounts to him or permit him to have a drawing account or any advance from the Distributor, except merchandise purchased on open account in accordance with the Distributor’s credit system. The Distributor has no right to and shall not require him to attend at any place or time for any purpose; to devote any particular time or hours to his business; to confine his activities to any particular type of customers or any particular territory; to follow schedules, routes, or itineraries; to make reports of any character or follow leads; to make collections of accounts or check credit standings, or the like; or to refrain from engaging in any other type of business.
*307 “E. As security and in good faith for the performance of this agreement and compliance with the Distributor’s credit regulations, the Dealer will furnish the Distributor with bond, or a letter of credit, conditioned to secure him against loss from Dealer’s breach of this agreement or failure to comply with the Distributor’s credit regulations, and will maintain said bond or letter of credit at his own expense during the life of this agreement.
“F. As further security and good faith for the performance of this agreement and compliance with the Distributor’s credit rules, the Dealer hereby sells and assigns to the Distributor the entire proceeds of the resale of all merchandise purchased by him from the Distributor on open account; hereby grants the Distributor a first and best lien on all merchandise purchased on open account by him from the Distributor and on the proceeds of its resale; and hereby authorizes the Distributor or his representatives, to enforce said lien and to transfer and collect the proceeds of said resale by him; all as security to the Distributor against any loss from breach by him of this agreement or said credit regulations.
“G. This agreement shall continue in force for a period of one year from date hereof, and thereafter from month to month, unless terminated by thirty days’ written notice of one party to the other; but the Distributor may terminate this agreement at any time on breach of the provisions of Paragraph ‘E’ or the occurrence of any event entitling the Distributor to recover thereunder, or if during any thirty-day period the Dealer has not paid the Distributor in cash or by delivery of the proceeds of resale thereof for at least one Kirby Cleaner.
“H. The Dealer has read this agreement carefully, and understands that his relations with the Distributor are to be covered solely by the provisions of this agreement, one copy of which he has retained.”

Beginning in 1951, appellant and the dealers executed an additional agreement entitled “Dealers Repurchase Agreement.” Prior to 1951, oral agreements substantially the same as the written repurchase agreement had been in effect. Under this agreement the distributor agreed to purchase “acceptable conditional sales contracts and/or promissory notes secured by chattel mortgages and/or leases, together with accompanying agreements and other documents (hereinafter referred to as ‘contracts’) representing sales or lease *308 of new merchandise by Dealer, ’ ’ under certain terms and conditions subsequently stated in minute detail. The dealer agreed that all contracts offered to the’ distributor would be on the form approved by the distributor; that the down payments made by purchasers or lessees on such contracts had been made in cash and not its equivalent and that no part thereof .had been loaned directly or indirectly by the dealer to the purchasers or lessees. The dealer agreed to provide and maintain service on all merchandise subject to the agreement in accordance with practices and policies established by the manufacturer and/or distributor. All contracts purchased by the distributor were to be without recourse except those becoming delinquent for a period of 65 days, in which case the dealer agreed to pay the balance on demand to the distributor. It was provided that the agreed purchase price was to be paid to the dealer or credited to his account when the paper was purchased, whereupon full title to the paper would pass to the distributor. Paragraph 6 of the agreement covered details in case of bankruptcy or insolvency of a dealer.

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Bluebook (online)
278 P.2d 946, 130 Cal. App. 2d 304, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sudduth-v-california-employment-stabilization-commission-calctapp-1955.