Utah Fire Clay Co. v. Industrial Commission

40 P.2d 183, 86 Utah 1, 1935 Utah LEXIS 98
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1935
DocketNo. 5470.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 183 (Utah Fire Clay Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utah Fire Clay Co. v. Industrial Commission, 40 P.2d 183, 86 Utah 1, 1935 Utah LEXIS 98 (Utah 1935).

Opinions

FOLLAND, Justice.

This case is here on certiorari to review the decision of the Industrial Commission of Utah awarding compensation to Wilbert I. Franklin, to be paid by the plaintiff, Utah Fire Clay Company, or its insurance carrier, the State Insurance Fund.

The company contends Mr. Franklin was an employee of R. S. James, an independent contractor, and that it is not liable for the payment of compensation to the employee for an injury sustained by him in the course of employment. That the employee was injured by accident in his employment is not questioned, and the controlling facts are referred to later in this opinion.

This case is controlled by Comp‘. Laws Utah 1917, § 3110, as amended by Laws Utah 1919, c. 63, p. 156. The section has been reenacted with slight verbal changes, and is now R. S. Utah 1933, 42-1-40. The part of the section applicable here reads:

“Where any employer procures any work to be done wholly or in part for him by a contractor over whose work he retains supervision or control, and the work so procured to be done is a part or process in the trade or business of said employer, then such contractor and all persons employed by him, and all subcontractors under him, and all persons employed by any such subcontractors, shall be deemed, within the meaning of this Section, employees of such original employer. Any person, firm or corporation engaged in the performance of work as an independent contractor, shall be deemed an employer within the meaning of this Section. The words ‘independent contractor,’ as herein used, is defined to be any person, association or *3 corporation engaged in the performance of any work for another, and while so engaged, is independent of the employer in all that pertains to the execution of the work is not subject to the rule or control of the employer, is engaged only in the performance of a definite job or piece of work, and is subordinate to the employer only in effecting a result in accordance with the employer’s design.”

The last part of the quoted' paragraph specifies that independent contractors are employers, and defines the term “independent contractor.” The first part of the paragraph indicates what persons operating under contract with an employer are not independent contractors, but are employees for the purposes of the act, notwithstanding the relationship between the parties may be evidenced by oral or written contract. To determine whether such contractors and their employees are to be regarded as employees within the statutory provision, a twofold test is supplied: (1) Is the work a part or process in the trade or business of the employer? And (2) does the employer retain supervision or control over the work of the contractor?

The question for determination is, not whether R. S. James was a contractor, but whether, notwithstanding the contract relationship which is clearly shown and which might 'be characterized by some of the elements incident to the relationship of independent contractor, it is such a relationship as is covered and referred' to in the first sentence of the quoted section of the statute as distinguished from the status of independent contractor defined in the latter part of the section. Such a contract is entirely proper and not in any sense unlawful. There is not anything in the statute which would prevent the company from having its delivery work done under and pursuant to such contract arrangement. The Legislature, however, undertook by this section to provide that workmen engaged in certain kinds of contract employment should have the benefit of the Compensation Law, and has provided that such workmen are, for the purposes of the act, to be regarded as employees of the contractee.

*4 Here there can he no doubt that the work of the delivery of its product to its customers and the transportation of its finished or unfinished product or other material within its plant or from one part of the plant to another is “a part or process” in the “trade or business” of the company. The only substantial conflict between the parties turns on the question of whether the company “retains supervision or control” over the work of the contractor and his employees. As to this, there is little conflict in the testimony, but mainly in the inferences and conclusions drawn from the facts in evidence. This may well be regarded as a border line case, but, since each case must be decided on its own facts, a close case must be determined as the facts peculiar to it may require.

Six or seven years prior to the hearing, the company entered into an oral contract with R. S. James to furnish trucks and truck drivers to do all its transportation and delivery service. During that period1 two trucks with drivers were furnished for the work. The contract by its terms did not specify what, if any, control or supervision was retained by the company over the contractor and his employees. It was general in its nature, and merely provided that the work be done for certain specified rates of pay based on the size and character of materials hauled and the length of the haul. The applicant was paid by James one-sixth of the total earnings of the two trucks. Mr. James did not himself operate either of the trucks. Franklin, the applicant, and another operator named Sandstrom operated the two trucks and reported daily to the shipping clerk of plaintiff. All deliveries were made under his direction. The transportation of materials between parts of the company’s plant or within the plant was done under the direction of the plant superintendent. While James was the owner of four trucks, during the last two years only two of them were licensed and operated, and he employed practically his whole time in the operation of a chicken farm, leaving supervision of the trucking business to others. The *5 daily transportation of the products of the company by the same persons engaged almost exclusively in that employment is quite different from the occasional transportation of its products by independent draymen who hold themselves out to serve the public whenever called. The relationship shown by the evidence is one extending over a period of years in which the applicant devoted himself almost exclusively to the work of the company under very close supervision and control, as to the work done for it, by its shipping clerk and plant superintendent. The following excerpts from the evidence indicate in a general way the kind of supervision that was exercised. Mr. James testified as follows:

“Q. Of late years about all you have done with reference to trucks is to tell the boys to go down- to the Fire Clay Company and go to work, and they have got their checks from you? A. I never had to tell them. They always go there, and Mr. Nowatny (plaintiff’s shipping clerk) lets them know if he wants something hauled early in the morning, or if there is nothing to do much the next day. They work together.”

Plaintiff’s manager testified:

“Q. Did the Utah Fire Clay ever at any time attempt to exercise any control over the details of the work of trucking or the way the trucking should be done, or anything in connection with the matter of transporting the Utah Fire Clay Company’s materials? A. Of course we naturally are anxious to see that our material is delivered.
“Q. Certainly: A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 183, 86 Utah 1, 1935 Utah LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utah-fire-clay-co-v-industrial-commission-utah-1935.