229 N.W. 340 | Minn. | 1930
Plaintiff is a painter and decorator by occupation. Defendant owns and operates a grocery business at Monticello in this state but does not own the building in which the business is carried on. The terms of his tenancy of the building are not shown, and it does not clearly appear whether defendant was under any obligation to make repairs. About November 9, 1928, defendant employed the plaintiff to paint the front of the store building. Plaintiff testified that he agreed to do the work for 50 cents an hour, and that it was understood or agreed that the entire cost of the job would be about $4. Defendant furnished the paint and a ladder for plaintiff's use. Defendant testified that plaintiff told him that the work would cost about $4 and that they agreed on that price; that nothing was said about 50 cents an hour. He said that he intended to engage plaintiff as his employe and after the accident reported him as such to the insurer; that he instructed plaintiff to burn off the old paint and as to how he wanted the front painted; that two colors were to be used and certain moldings were to be painted in a certain manner; that some strips were to be painted yellow and others green. He further testified that he considered it a regular part of his business to keep his store building in presentable condition and presentable repair; that he was making his store over into a community store and wanted the front painted a particular way.
On November 9, 1928, while plaintiff was engaged in doing the work and was standing upon the ladder mentioned the ladder buckled or broke and he fell onto the sidewalk and was injured.
The referee found that plaintiff was an employe of the defendant for hire and that the accident arose out of and in the course of his employment, and awarded compensation. On appeal the industrial commission added a finding that the employment was in the usual course of the business or occupation of the employer, and then affirmed the findings and decision of the referee.
Defendant and insurer contend here that the plaintiff was an independent contractor. The case of Schoewe v. Winona P. G. Co.
The next claim is that the employment was casual and not in the usual course of the trade or business of the employer. That the employment was casual may be conceded. The referee and commission made no finding to the contrary. It is conceded that in order to be excluded from workmen's compensation on this ground the employment must be both casual and not in the usual course of the trade or business of the employer. Nygaard v. Throndson Bros.
We find ample evidence to sustain the findings of the commission that plaintiff's employment was in the usual course of the business or trade of the employer. See State ex rel. Foss v. Nelson,
The order of the industrial commission is affirmed.