I.
BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
This is a worker’s compensation case. The respondent, Mike Merrill (Merrill), is a pharmacist who was acting as a general contractor in building his own house. Merrill hired a number of subcontractors tо work on the project and also organized the purchase and delivery of necessary building materials. He was not involved in the day-to-day building activities other than in a general supervisory capacity.
Merrill contracted with Randy Castona to frame the house. The contract provided that Castona would be responsible for the insurance required by law. However, Cas-tona never procured worker’s compensation insurance before beginning construction on Merrill’s house. Castona hired the appellant, Michael Dewey, to work as a carpenter’s helper, and on his first day of work, September 6, 1990, Dewey injured his left eye while operating a nail gun. As a result of the accident, Dewey lost his eye.
Dewey brought an action against Merrill and Castоna to recover worker’s compensation benefits. The Industrial Commission found that Dewey was an employee of Cas-tona and that Dewey had a permanent partial disability of forty-fivе percent of the whole person. The Commission awarded
The Commission found that Merrill was not liable for payment of worker’s compensation benefits to Dewey because: (1) Merrill was not the statutory employer of Dewey; and (2) Merrill was exempt from liability under LC. § 72-212(5) because the employment was nоt “for the sake of pecuniary gain.”
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Court’s review of decisions of the Industrial Commission is limited by the Idaho Constitution and prior case law. We review questions of fact only to determine if there is substantial competent evidence to support the Commission’s findings, and we exercise free review over questions of law. Idaho Constitution, art. 5, § 9;
Vendx Mktg. Co., Inc. v. Dep’t of Employment,
III.
MERRILL WAS A STATUTORY EMPLOYER OF DEWEY
The Commission concluded that Merrill was not a statutory employer because Merrill did not have the “right to control” Dewey. The worker’s compensаtion statute broadens the relationship between employer and employee; it is a statutory relationship which does not require the common law element of control.
Adam v. Titan Equip. Supply Corp.,
Idaho Code § 72-102(11) defines “employer” as:
any person who has expressly or impliedly hired or contracted the services of another. It includes contractors and subcontractors. It includes the owner or lessee of premises, or other persоn who is virtually the proprietor or operator of the business there carried on, but who, by reason of there being an independent contractor or for any other reason, is not the dirеct employer of the workmen there employed.
This expanded definition of “employer” was “ ‘designed to prevent an employer from avoiding liability under the workmen’s compensatiоn statutes by subcontracting the work to others’ who may be irresponsible and not insure their employ-ees_”
Runcorn,
Merrill was an “employer” in this case because he was acting as a general contractor for the purpose of building his own house. Like any general contractor, Merrill hired the services of various subcontractors, made payments to them, and or
ganized
Because Merrill was his. own contractor, the present case is distinguishable frоm
Moon v. Ervin,
The present case is distinct from Moon because Merrill was a contractor. Unlike Schreiber, Merrill took an active role in the construction of his house by hiring subcontractors, providing them the necessary materials and cоordinating their services. Accordingly, Merrill was an “employer” under the terms of I.C. § 72-102(11).
IV.
MERRILL IS EXEMPT FROM LIABILITY BECAUSE THE EMPLOYMENT WAS NOT FOR THE SAKE OF PECUNIARY GAIN
The Industrial Commission found that Merrill’s employment of Dewey was exempt under the worker’s compensation statute because it was not for the sake of pecuniary gain. We agree with the Commission.
Idaho Code § 72-212 states that the provisions of the worker’s compensation law do not apply to “[ejmployment which is not carried on by the employer for the sake of pecuniary gain.” I.C. 72-212(5). Idaho Code § 72-204 defines private employment for purposes of the worker’s compensation law:
“Emрloyment,” in the case of private employers, includes employment only in fit trade or occupation which is carried on by the employer for the sake of pecuniary gain and also includes any of the pursuits specified in section 72-212, when the employer shall have elected to come under the law as provided in section 72-213.
I.C. § 72-204(4). Statutes which relate to the same subject are
in pari materia
and they should be construed together to effectuate legislative intent.
Grand Canyon Dories v. Idaho State Tax Comm’n,
The Court addressed the “pecuniary gain” issue in
Lynskey v. Lind,
The only issue addressed by the Court was whether Lind was an exempt employer under the worker’s compensation statute.
2
The Court held that Lind was exempt from worker’s compensation liability because he was not building the house for pecuniary gain.
Id.
at 790,
Dewey argues that Merrill was acting for the sake of pecuniary gain because he saved ten percent on the cost of building his home by acting as his own contractor. We disagree. Pecuniary gain is not determined by whether a party makes a profit or loses money on certain transactions.
See Dillard v. Jones,
Whether Merrill actually saved money by acting as his own general contractor is not the issue in this case. Merrill was not in the business of building, selling or renting homes, and he was not supplying a service for remuneration. As the Court explained in
Lynskey,
the Worker’s Compensation Act was intended for commercial and governmental employers who can spread the сosts of compensation through the price of goods and services.
V.
CONCLUSION
While we disagree with the Commission’s conclusion that Merrill was not a statutory employer, we agree with its second conclusiоn that Merrill is exempt from the worker’s compensation provisions because he did not employ Dewey for the sake of pecuniary gain. Accordingly, we affirm the order of the Industrial Commissiоn. Costs are awarded to the respondent.
