Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Mathews

111 P.2d 111, 56 Wyo. 479, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 10
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1941
Docket2183
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 111 P.2d 111 (Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Mathews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Mathews, 111 P.2d 111, 56 Wyo. 479, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 10 (Wyo. 1941).

Opinions

*484 Riner, Chief Justice.

The Unemployment Compensation Commission of Wyoming was defeated in its attempt to collect from *485 J. P. Mathews, doing business under the firm name and style of The Palace Cafe and Bar Service, certain contributions alleged by said Commission to be due on account of the services of certain bands or orchestras which rendered services as musicians under the circumstances hereinafter detailed. The parties will be herein designated occasionally and for the sake of brevity: the Unemployment Compensation Commission of Wyoming as the “Commission” and J. P. Mathews as the “owner”.

The action which the Commission instituted for the purpose above indicated was brought in the district court of Sheridan County by the Commission against the owner under the provisions of Chapter 113 of the 1937 Session Laws of Wyoming as amended by Chapter 124 of the Session Laws of Wyoming, 1939, and was tried to the court without a jury, with the result above mentioned. The record in the cause was brought here by direct appeal, the Commission claiming prejudicial error in the trial court’s general finding and judgment thereon in said action against it. The record discloses that there was submitted in the course of the trial of the action evidence of certain facts and circumstances as follows:

The owner is engaged with one John Wallace, who is a silent partner and general manager in a business located in the City of Sheridan at No. 141 North Main Street, and known as The Palace Cafe and Bar and a room called the “Palace Gardens” in connection with said cafe and bar. The Palace Gardens is an additional room connected with and entered through the cafe and operated as a lounge, where people may go for meals or drinks as guests may desire. “It is a dining room and a banquet room to the cafe”. It is used in the day time, or at night if the owner gives a dance or entertainment for the people.

*486 Contributions to the Commission were paid- by the owner on the wages of the waitresses, cooks and bartenders employed in the business. The owner provided orchestras or bands for the benefit of the patrons of the Palace Gardens that came in to dance or that came in and ordered refreshments, and these organizations furnished their services in that room during the hours from approximately 8:30 P; M. to 1:00 or 1:30 A. M. “on week nights”; on Saturday nights they worked from 7:30 to 12:30 P. M. No admission was charged to customers of the gardens and these bands or orchestras were hired through their leaders or contractors for the most part by Wallace, though the owner hired some of them.

The evidence submitted in the case deals chiefly with the relations existing between the owner and two bands or orchestras directed, one by a man by the name of Brooklander and one by a man named Sidell. The boss or director of each orchestra or band directed its work. They were paid weekly by checks payable either to the order of the directors or léaders of the orchestras or to “Brooklander’s Orchestra” or to “Sidell’s Orchestra”. These checks were always endorsed by the several directors or leaders of these organizations, but not by the individual members thereof when they were cashed. Some of the checks were cashed in the bank and others in grocery stores where they had been trading. Wallace hired Brooklander- and either Mathews or Wallace hired Sidell to furnish music for the patrons that came to the Palace Gardens room for “refreshments, eats”. Neither the owner nor Wallace had the right to discharge members of these bands or orchestras, that right being vested in the director of these several organizations. Occasionally Wallace told Brook-lander when to take intermissions in playing, though originally Brooklander and Wallace had a general agreement, entered into before his organization com *487 menced its work, to take intermissions just before the bar closed. Sidell testified that he was told that in taking other intermissions he was to use his own judgment. The checks aforesaid were cashed by the leaders of these organizations, and the other members were paid by such leaders after deducting any board bills or “tabs” owed by them to the cafe of the owner.

The musicians in these several organizations supplied their own musical instruments, though the owner furnished a piano which was used by them in the course of their work. The Musicians’ Union of the City of Sheridan governed the minimum rate to be paid these bands or orchestras for their services. In the case of the two organizations just mentioned payment was required to be made in the sum of $27.50 for the leader and $25.00 each per week for “side men”, and the leaders contacted “men to play” engagements for the owner. In other words, the owner or Wallace merely hired the leader and he hired his musicians, the minimum wage scale for the band being fixed by the Musicians’ Union of the City of Sheridan. The leaders of these bands or orchestras were privileged to obtain more money for their weekly services if they could obtain it. Under the aforesaid Union’s rules there must be “a leader or contractor”. These organizations could have had other engagements so far as they did not conflict with their engagement at the Palace Gardens.

The owner did not furnish the music these several organizations used in rendering their services. On a couple of occasions Mathews or Wallace told Brook-lander what pieces were to be played. Brooklander told his organization when to start and when to stop playing and also when to play encores. These leaders had the final authority to determine what music should be played, and were the sole judges as to whether any musician in his organization was doing his work properly. The members of these orchestras or. bands “looked *488 to” their leaders for payment of their salaries, if such leaders received money from the owner for the orchestra’s weekly wages and did not pay it over to them. These orchestras or bands played in other cities in the state, the Brooklander organization playing in Casper, Wyoming, under the name “Jimmie Brooklander and his Band” sometime before they came to Sheridan. The Sidell organization was designated “J. Sidell and Boys”, and Sidell testified that he was “responsible to the members of that band for their salary”.

Brooklander never paid any Social Security tax for the musicians employed by him, though he offered to pay them to the government. Before Brooklander was employed by Wallace the other employers Brooklander worked for deducted the tax from the latter’s pay check, but Wallace did not do so, as he said he did not have anything to do with it. Wallace testified for the defendant that “at times if I didn’t think they (the musicians) were playing often enough I would go around and ask them to play more often”, and they usually did so.

Under Section 2 of Chapter 113, Laws of Wyoming, 1937, which embodies the Unemployment Compensation law of this State and which undertakes to supply certain definitions, we find that sub-division “(i) (1)” reals:

“ ‘Employment’, subject to the other provisions of this sub-section, means service, including service in interstate commerce, performed for wages or under any contract or hire, written or oral, express or implied.”

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Bluebook (online)
111 P.2d 111, 56 Wyo. 479, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unemployment-compensation-commission-v-mathews-wyo-1941.