163 P. 209 | Cal. | 1917
Review to annul an award of the Industrial Accident Commission. On March 7, 1915, Raymond Harris, a boy fourteen years of age, while caddying for a member of the Claremont Country Club, leaned against the hand-rail of a bridge spanning a small creek on the golf course of the club. The rail gave way and the boy fell backward into the creek, suffering a permanent injury to one of his elbows. He filed his claim for compensation with the Industrial *396 Accident Commission. The Claremont Country Club and its insurer, the Aetna Life Insurance Company, answered, denying only the fact of employment. The commission, after hearing, awarded the applicant $1,170, in addition to his outlay for medical attendance.
The principal contention of petitioners is that the boy was not an employee of the country club within the meaning of the provisions of the code and the terms of the Workmen's Compensation Act, [Stats. 1913, p. 279]. The undisputed facts are that the club owns and maintains a golf links for the pleasure of such of its members as desire to indulge in the game. The general control over this sport is vested in appropriate committees selected from the club members. Many golfers have desired, and do desire, the services of attendants to carry their golf bags, to aid in the search for the ball, and to perform other like familiar services. For these members the club provides caddies, and over them is a paid employee known as the caddy-master. The club also maintains a caddy-house, which is the station of the caddies until their services are requisitioned. The caddies are graded into three classes, based upon their records and abilities in the service, the best belonging to class "A," the next best to class "B," and the beginners and least efficient to class "C." "A" class caddies are paid sixty cents, "B" class caddies fifty cents, and "C" class caddies forty cents a game. A player requisitioning a caddy may not designate the boy whose services he desires. His request is made to the caddy-master, who, under a system, summons the caddy whose turn it is to serve. The caddy is supplied with a card, whereon at the conclusion of the game the member makes his report to the caddy-master, with remarks touching the service and qualifications of the boy, and from time to time the caddy-master regrades his caddies in accordance with these reports. At the close of the game the player hands to the caddy-master, with his report, the amount earned by his caddy, and this amount is immediately delivered by the caddy-master to the boy. Thus each player pays the caddy, and the indirect method of payment through the caddy-master is apparently designed for the twofold purpose of convenience in making change and as a check on "tips" or donations by the members to the caddy in excess of the actual amount earned. The boys are taken on by the club through the caddy-master *397
or Greens Committee, and the caddy-master or Greens Committee is empowered to discharge a caddy, or, in other words, to forbid him to frequent the golf links and seek and secure employment. Upon the other hand, while actually caddying, the control of the activities of the boy are wholly with the member using him, and the club, as a club, has of course no means of knowing what particular orders or directions a member may give to his caddy, nor what unusual or dangerous duties he may call upon him to perform. For these reasons petitioners argue that the caddies are not employees of the club, and that "all that the club does is to afford boys who wish to serve as caddies an opportunity for employment by the members of the club who play golf." For this position petitioners believe they find full support in section 2009 of the Civil Code, in Boswell v. Laird,
The fact that the injured boy reported for duty and was employed only on specific days does not militate at all against *399 the proposition that he was an employee. (Dewhurst v. Mather, 2 K. B. 754.)
The final complaint of petitioners is that the amount of the award is not justified by the evidence. Elements of uncertainty in this evidence are pointed out by the petitioners, as that it was based upon the earning capacity of a first-class caddy, and there was no assurance that the injured boy would become a class "A" caddy; also that there was no assurance that when he attained his majority he would pursue the vocation of a caddy; and as little assurance that if he did pursue the vocation, he would follow it every day instead of only on Saturdays and Sundays, as he was then doing. These statements are unquestionably true, but nevertheless the law itself takes knowledge of them and defines the duties of the Industrial Accident Commission under the indicated circumstances. The evidence did show that the basis of the award was within the earning capacity of good caddies. The act itself (Stats. 1913, sec. 17, c. 176, p. 289), provides as follows: "If the injured employee is a minor, and his incapacity, whether total or partial, is permanent, his average weekly earnings shall be deemed, within the limits fixed, to be the weekly sum, that under ordinary circumstances he would probably be able to earn after obtaining the age of twenty-one years, in the occupation in which he was employed at the time of the injury, if he had not been injured." And it is held, supporting such a law, that it is proper to take into consideration the increased wage which a minor may be fairly expected to earn. (Kilberg v.Vitch,
The award is therefore affirmed.
Lorigan, J., Melvin, J., Shaw, J., Sloss, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred. *400