In 1956 Ralph Lloyd, Jr., was engaged in business in Pottawattamie County under the trade name of Lloyd’s Turkey Ranch. He operated on a six-acre tract, where he raised turkeys and some chickens. Each year when poultry *158 was ready for the market, he processed about half of the turkey crop by slaughtering and dressing them. This was done in a separate building on the ranch. There were three or four regular employees; when the processing started in the fall about six more were hired. The plaintiff was one of these extra helpers. She was employed in October of 1956 and worked until December 14 of the same year, when she was injured by slipping on the floor in the building where the turkeys were processed. The defendant also raised pheasants, guinea hens, apples, pears, some cattle, and rented horses, and sold eggs from the poultry. The plaintiff’s work was solely in the building where the turkeys were processed. She had no part in the raising of any of the produce. Her work was seasonal, and the record indicates it would have ended when the processing of the turkeys for the Christmas trade was finished. The defendant testified that he raised about 8000 turkeys in 1956, about half of which were processed and the remainder sold live to packers. While both the Commissioner and the District Court referred to the supposed fact that he purchased turkeys from others for processing, the defendant in argument denies this, and we think the record, fairly construed, does not show the processing of any turkeys except of his own raising. We shall so consider it. The plaintiff prevailed before the Deputy Commissioner, the Commissioner, and the trial court, and the defendant has brought the case to us on appeal.
I. The defendant relies entirely upon the exclusion contained in section 85.1, subsection 3, Code of 1954. It is there provided the Workmen’s Compensation Act shall not apply to “Persons engaged in agriculture, insofar as injuries shall be incurred by employees while engaged in agricultural pursuits or any operations immediately connected therewith, whether on or off the premises of the employer * * The defendant says he was engaged in agriculture, and the plaintiff was injured while employed in an operation immediately connected therewith. He concedes that while cleaning the floor she was not engaged in an agricultural pursuit, but contends it was closely connected.
The appeal poses the difficult question of when the processing of crops raised on a farm or ranch ceases to be agriculture
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and becomes a commercial enterprise. “Agriculture” is variously defined; but generally, in its broad sense, it is said to be “tbe art or science of cultivating the ground, including harvesting of crops and rearing and management of livestock.” 3 C. J. S., Agricidture, section 1, page 365. In Slycord v. Horn,
It will be noted that the exclusion in our statute, section 85.1(3), is of “Persons engaged in agriculture, insofar as injuries shall be incurred by employees while engaged in agricultural pursuits.” Professor Maurice II. Merrill, in his careful analysis of this statute in Fifteen Years More of Workmen’s Compensation in Iowa, 32 Iowa Law Review, 1, 7, points out that two things must concur to bar recovery by the injured employee under this statute. He says:
“The exclusion is limited to people [persons] who are ‘engaged in agriculture’ and then only if at the time of injury they are engaged in an agricultural pursuit or an operation closely connected therewith.” So he points out that in Trullinger v. Fremont County, 223 Towa 677,
The Iowa Law Review article also notes an erroneous statement in Criger v. Mustaba Investment Co.,
The defendant here appears to be of the opinion that the term “engaged in agriculture” must be held to apply only to the employer. As we view the case, the point is not important. Professor Merrill does not make such a distinction; 32 Iowa Law Review, supra, pages 7 and 8, nor do we, although the question is not decisive. The defendant then proceeds to assume as an inescapable fact that the employer here was engaged in agriculture and that the injured employee, the plaintiff, was clearly engaged at least in an operation closely connected with agricultural pursuits and so is excluded from the benefits of the Act.
It is upon the question whether the employer was engaged in agriculture in the operation of the turkey packing plant that we part company with the defendant and the able brief and argument of his counsel. Of course the employer was engaged in agriculture, under the broad definition, in raising his poultry and in marketing it. But an employer may be engaged in two distinct occupations, one agricultural and one commercial, manufacturing, or otherwise industrial. 99 C. J. S., Workmen’s Compensation, section 29, pages 184, 185; Tucker v. Newman,
There is no evidence as to the custom of turkey raisers in processing their own turkeys, or selling them live. The New Jersey Supreme Court has held that the cleaning, grading and packing of potatoes is essential to the preparation of the potatoes for market, and so excluded from the Unemployment Compen
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sation Law. Pioneer Potato Co. v. Division of Employment Security, 17 N. J. 543,
The determination of where agriculture stops and commercial processing begins is not easy. The defendant thought it more profitable to process as many of his turkeys as he could sell; but this in no way answers the question. Grains must be harvested, and fruits and vegetables must be garnered and put in condition for marketing; and these are properly a part of agriculture. But the problem before us goes one step further. It involves the question of a process, not necessary but perhaps more profitable, in marketing. In this situation we resort to an established rule followed in other jurisdictions.
We ourselves have frequently said that the workmen’s compensation law is to be liberally construed in aid of accomplishing the object and purpose of the legislation. Jacques v. Farmers Lumber & Supply Co.,
In 99 C. J. S., Workmen’s Compensation, section 27, page 175, it is said: “* * * with respect to the employments to which they apply, the acts are to be construed liberally, or beneficially, and to effectuate the legislative purpose.” Following this, in the same volume of G. J. S., it is stated that “a compensation statute is to be construed liberally and reasonably with the view of extending its beneficent provisions to all who can be fairly brought within them”; and the rule “applies in determining whether one is within the agricultural or farm worker exemption from the statute.” 99 C. J. S., Workmen’s Compensation, section 33, pages 190, 191.
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This rule has been applied in Free v. McEver,
The Idaho Supreme Court has followed the same ride. In Mundell v. Swedlund,
See also Fels v. Industrial Commission,
It is true that a clear legislative purpose must not be defeated or whittled away by a strained construction, in an attempt to apply this rule. But we think it may be applied here to resolve a somewhat doubtful status of the injured employee. If the defendant had not been engaged also in the raising of turkeys, if his sole vocation had been that of slaughtering them and processing them for the market, it could not reasonably be urged that he was engaged in agriculture. An operator of a packing plant is not so engaged. The plaintiff had not at any time had any connection with the raising of the fowls; her sole employment was in the packing plant. We think the holding that the defendant was engaged in two businesses: one, the agricultural pursuit of raising and marketing turkeys and other poultry, and the other, that of operating a packing plant, is *163 fairly warranted by the record. This is particularly so when we consider the rule above stated, that in ease of doubt we must construe the statute liberally and with a view to extend its aid to every employee who can fairly be brought within it. The purpose of the Workmen’s Compensation Acts generally is to furnish a measure of protection to those who may be injured while employed; and many of the Acts refer to “hazardous occupations” and the need for such compensation for those who suffer from industrial accidents. Our own statute does not use the word “hazardous”; but we think it was intended to protect against injuries received in other than agricultural occupations. The danger is just as real if the packing plant is operated by one who also raises the animals, or fowls, which are therein processed, as if they were purchased from others. The purpose of the law to protect against accidents occurring in such a business seems evident. It is not a strained construction of the words “agriculture” and “agricultural pursuits” to hold that they do not apply to the occupation of the plaintiff in the case before us.
We have considered the other authorities cited by the defendant, but do not find them in point. There is an informative discussion of “processing” of foods in preparation for the market by changing them to a different state in Fischer Artificial Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Iowa State Tax Commission,
