Wiltsee v. California Employment Commission

158 P.2d 612, 69 Cal. App. 2d 120, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 636
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 7, 1945
DocketCiv. 12767
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 158 P.2d 612 (Wiltsee v. California Employment 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
Wiltsee v. California Employment Commission, 158 P.2d 612, 69 Cal. App. 2d 120, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 636 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

The California Employment Commission, after a hearing, determined that E. A. Wiltsee was subject to certain assessments under the Unemployment Insurance Act. (Stats. 1935, p. 1226, as amended; Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8780d.) Wiltsee paid the assessments under protest, and brought this action as permitted by § 45.10 of the act, to recover the amounts so paid. The superior court determined that Wiltsee was not subject to the assessments and granted him a refund. From this judgment the commission appeals.

Section 6.5 of the act provides that “employment” means “service, including service, in interstate commerce, performed for wages or under any contract of hire, written or oral, express or implied.” Section 8.5 defines “employing unit” as “any individual or type of organization, including any partnership, association, . . . which has, or subsequent to January 1, 1936, had, in its employ one or more individuals performing services for it within this State. All individuals performing services within this State for any employing unit which maintains two or more separate establishments within this State shall be deemed to be employed by a single employing unit for all the purposes of this act.”

Section 9(a), since 1937, has defined “employer” as “Any employing unit, which for some portion of a day, but not necessarily simultaneously, in each of twenty different weeks, whether or not such weeks are or were consecutive, has within the current calendar year or had within the preceding calen *122 dar year in employment four or more individuals, irrespective of whether the same individuals are or were employed in each such day; provided, that prior to January 1, 1938, employer means any employing unit which for some portion of a day, but not necessarily simultaneously, in each of twenty different weeks, whether or not such weeks are or were consecutive, has within the current calendar year or had within the preceding calendar year in employment eight or more individuals, irrespective of whether the same individuals are or were employed in each such day.”

The facts are not in dispute. Wiltsee engages in various mining operations. One such operation in which he at least has an interest is the Hoosier Gulch Placers. It is admitted that if Hoosier Gulch Placers be considered as an employing unit separate from the other individual operations of Wiltsee that not. a sufficient number of employees for a sufficient period of time were hired by Wiltsee in connection with these separate activities to bring him within sections 8.5 and 9(a) above quoted. It is also conceded that the Hoosier Gulch Placers hired a sufficient number of employees for a sufficient period of time during the period here involved (April 1, 1937, to March 31, 1941) to render it an employing unit under section 9(a), and that that enterprise has paid all contributions required of it under the act. No contributions were originally paid by Wiltsee based upon his individual activities other than the Hoosier Gulch Placers. The commission found that the Hoosier Gulch Placers was an individual operation of Wiltsee and therefore that that activity and his other individual operations should be grouped together under section 8.5 of the act so as to constitute one employing unit. An assessment was thereupon levied against Wiltsee, the amount of which is not in dispute, based upon his employer activities in his operations other than Hoosier Gulch Placers. This assessment was paid under protest. The superior court determined that the Hoosier Gulch Placers was a separate employing unit from Wiltsee as an individual, and ordered a refund of the assessment insofar as it included contributions based on the individual activities of Wiltsee other than Hoosier Gulch Placers. The sole question presented on this appeal is whether Hoosier Gulch Placers is an individual operation of Wiltsee, as found by the commission, or whether, as found by the trial court, it is a separate employing unit of which Wiltsee is not the sole operator.

*123 The action was tried on the record produced before the commission. That record shows that Wiltsee filed a certificate of doing business under a fictitious name in which he declared that he was the sole owner and proprietor of the Hoosier Gulch Placers. The returns filed with the Department of Employment declared that the operation was Wiltsee’s individual enterprise. Wiltsee claims, however, that the Hoosier Gulch Placers is an employing unit separate from his other individual enterprises because of a certain contract dated November 5, 1936, between Wiltsee and one Merrill Yost. It is the theory of Wiltsee that this contract made Yost not only his employee but also a joint adventurer, and that for that reason the enterprise was not solely operated by Wiltsee. This contention is based on the fact that although the contract admittedly made Yost an employee of Wiltsee, it also provided that Yost was to have a nonterminable interest in 25 per cent of the net profits of the operation after the return of Wiltsee’s original investment. It was the theory of the trial court that this interest of Yost created a relationship in the nature of a joint venture between Yost and Wiltsee so far as the Unemployment Insurance Act is concerned. Since Yost has no such interest in any of the other of Wiltsee’s operations, the trial court concluded that Hoosier Gulch Placers constituted a separate employing unit, and that the assessments levied against Wiltsee which failed to so treat it were erroneous.

The contract recites that Wiltsee “has engaged or is about to engage in a gold dredging operation on . . . the Hoosier Gulch property, and intends to carry on the said project under the name of Hoosier Gulch Placers”; that Yost had been instrumental in discovering the gold dredging possibilities of the project; that Yost “has been and intends to continue in the employ of the said E. A. Wiltsee for the purpose of locating gold dredging and other mining property and assisting the said E. A. Wiltsee with the operation” of the properties. It then provides as follows;

“1. E. A. Wiltsee agrees to employ the said Merrill Yost and the said Merrill Yost agrees to serve the said E. A. Wiltsee in the location of gold dredging and other mining property and assisting the said E. A. Wiltsee in the operation of the said Hoosier Gulch property, and other mining properties, and in the performance of such other duties which may be assigned to him by the said E. A. Wiltsee, at a monthly salary of *124 $210.00, and such other additional compensation as herein provided for.
“2. During the continuation of the said employment the said Merrill Tost agrees to faithfully, skillfully and satisfactorily discharge his duties in the location of gold dredging and other mining properties and in assisting the said E. A. Wiltsee in the operation of the said Hoosier Gulch Placers, and to devote his full time and attention to such business.
“3. The said E. A. Wiltsee further agrees to pay the said Merrill Yost and Mary Yost, his wife, jointly, or the survivor of them, a sum equal to twenty-five (25%) per cent, of the net profits made by the said E. A. Wiltsee in the operation of the said Hoosier Gulch Placers, after the return to the said E. A. Wiltsee of all money by him invested therein.
“4.

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Bluebook (online)
158 P.2d 612, 69 Cal. App. 2d 120, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiltsee-v-california-employment-commission-calctapp-1945.