No appeal having been taken from the award of the board entered against the decedent’s immediate employer, Walker, whom the board found to be an independent contractor, the only issue properly before this court for determination is whether the board was further authorized to find that Evans was secondarily liable to the claimants under Code § 114-112 which provides as follows: “A principal, intermediate, or subcontractor shall be liable for compensation to any employee injured while in the employ of any of his subcontractors engaged upon the subject-matter of the contract, to the same extent as the immediate employer.
“Any principal, intermediate, or subcontractor who shall pay compensation under the foregoing provisions may recover the *122 amount paid, from any person who, independently of this section, would have been liable to pay compensation to the injured employee, or from any intermediate contractor.
“Every claim for compensation under this section shall be in the first instance presented to and instituted against the immediate employer, but such proceedings shall not constitute a waiver of the employee’s right to recover compensation under this Title from the principal or intermediate contractor: Provided, that the collection of full compensation from one employer shall bar recovery by the employee against any others, nor shall he collect from all a total compensation in excess of the amount for which any of the said contractors is liable.
“This section shall apply only in cases where the injury occurred on, in or about the premises on which the principal contractor has undertaken to execute work, or which are otherwise under his control or management.”
If the relationship of principal contractor-subcontractor existed between Evans and Walker within the purview of
Code
§ 114-112, then the award was proper.
Churchwell Bros. Constr. Co. v. Archie R. Briggs Constr. Co.,
A similar situation is presented in the present case. Here, Evans executed a “Timber Sale Contract” with the United States Government which gave him the right to cut and remove certain timber from the Hitchiti Experimental Forest but which obligated him to perform substantial services for the government which would help to preserve and maintain the Hitchiti Experimental Forest in accordance with good forestry practices and which would enable the government, acting through the Forestry Service of the United States Department of Agriculture, to evaluate rate of growth, timber yield, etc., in the various compartments or divisions of the forest. After contracting with the government, Evans then in turn subcontracted with Walker, an independent contractor, to cut and remove the timber and to perform those services in behalf of the government which he was obligated to perform under the principal contract.
The only material difference in this case and the
McClurd
case, supra, therefore, is that Evans was the buyer under a contract of sale executed with another party while McClurd was the seller; in connection with the principal contract, however, both Evans and McClurd were obligated to perform substantial services, McClurd to cut and remove pulpwood from his own land and deliver to Rayonier, Inc., the buyer, and Evans to cut and remove the timber from the land of the seller and in connection therewith to perform other substantial services for the seller. Both, having executed the principal contract, then in turn sublet the work to be performed thereunder to a third party; and both in our opinion were properly held to be principal contractors within the purview of
Code
§ 114-112. See in this connection, Brothers v. Dierks Lumber &c. Co.,
The award of the board finding that Evans was secondarily liable to the employees of Walker under Code § 114-112 was authorized by the evidence before the board, and the judgment of the superior court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
