The Appellate Panel of the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Commission (“SCWCC”) found Andrew Tickle (“Tickle”) did not regularly employ four or more employees. Accordingly, the Appellate Panel did not have jurisdiction to award benefits to Hernandez-Zuniga (“Claimant”). The circuit court affirmed the Decision and Order of the Appellate Panel. We affirm. 1
FACTUAL!PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Claimant sustained his injury on May 10, 2003 when he fell from a ladder while painting for his employer, Tickle. He sought temporary disability benefits and medical treatment under the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act (Act). Tickle claimed he was not subject to the Act because he regularly employed less than four workers.
At the time of his hearing, Claimant was a twenty-one year old Honduran with a sixth grade education who had been in the United States four years working as a painter. He began working for Tickle some time in the spring of 2003. Claimant worked eight hours a day and some weekends, earning ten dollars per hour. Tickle paid him directly, once a week, in cash. After commencing work for Tickle, Claimant worked regularly for approximately one month, until the day he fell. Claimant believed he would have continued employment with Tickle had he not been injured.
Claimant undertook three projects for Tickle — one project painting beach chairs and two house-painting projects. Two people, Claimant and Alie Hernandez (Alie),
2
worked on the
Tickle left his previous employer, the Finish Company, in 2003 and started his own business as a painting contractor. He claimed he initially arranged with Claimant and the other workers to supply all the paint for the Garrett house, get a draw each week, and divide the proceeds with them, in cash, without tax deductions. Ultimately he paid them weekly wages at an hourly rate. Tickle explained he hired the workers “project by project” because he had not yet established his company. Claimant and his co-workers provided their own brushes and caulk guns. Tickle acknowledged he agreed to pay them a flat fee of $1000 to paint the Hewitt house. Claimant did not complete the Hewitt project because of his injury, so Tickle paid him hourly for work completed.
Tickle asseverated there were never more than three people working for him in April or May 2003. He thought someone helped finish up after Claimant fell but denied knowing anyone named Franklin working on the projects. Beth Garrett, owner of the first house Tickle’s crew painted, maintained she never observed more than three people working on her home.
Tickle obtained a business license on June 26, 2003 and established Tickle Tools in July 2003. He declared he conducted no official business as Tickle Tools before July 21, 2003.
The hearing commissioner found:
The evidence established that upon the jobs where the Claimant worked there were only two (2) individuals on the first and three (3) on the second. The only evidence ofemployment of four (4) employees, which is conflicting, was for a day or two. Therefore, the Claimant did not meet his burden of proving the Employer “regularly” employed four ' or more employees.
Accordingly, the hearing commissioner ruled Claimant was not entitled to benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act because Tickle did not regularly employ four (4) or more employees as required by section 42-1-150 of the South Carolina Code of Laws (Supp. 2006). Consequently, the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Commission lacked jurisdiction to address the claim. The Appellate Panel affirmed the hearing commissioner’s ruling and adopted his Decision and Order in its entirety. The circuit court affirmed.
ISSUE
Did the Claimant demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that Tickle regularly employed four or more employees and was subject to the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act?
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Judicial review of a Workers’ Compensation decision is governed by the substantial evidence rule of the Administrative Procedures Act.
Baxter v. Martin Bros., Inc.,
Workers’ compensation statutes are construed liberally in favor of coverage, and South Carolina’s policy is to resolve jurisdictional doubts in favor of the inclusion of employees within workers’ compensation coverage.
Nelson v. Yellow Cab Co.,
In determining such jurisdictional questions, it must be kept in mind that the basic purpose of the Workmen’s Compensation Act is the inclusion of employers and employees within its coverage and not their exclusion, and doubts of jurisdiction will be resolved in favor of inclusion rather than exclusion. However, a construction should not be adopted that does violence to the specific provisions of the Act.
White v. J.T. Strahan Co.,
While the appellate court may take its own view of the preponderance of evidence on the existence of an employer-employee relationship, the final determination of witness cred
LAWIANALYSIS
Claimant contends the circuit court erred in finding Tickle was not an employer subject to the Workers’ Compensation Act because he did not have four or more persons regularly employed. Specifically, Claimant maintains that four workers were Tickle’s regular employees, and three individuals were his statutory employees. We disagree.
“The issue of whether an employer regularly employs the requisite number of employees to be subject to the Workers’ Compensation Act is jurisdictional.”
Harding v. Plumley,
Pellucidly, the appellate court’s standard of review in cases involving jurisdictional questions is
not
a substantial evidence standard. Our precedent lucidly establishes that an appellate court reviews jurisdictional issues by making its own findings of fact without regard to the findings and conclusions of the Appellate Panel.
Harding,
I. Four or More Persons Regularly Employed
Claimant urges that section 42-1-360(2) does not apply in the instant case, because the greater weight of the evidence indicates Tickle had four regularly employed workers during the relevant time period.
The South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act does not mandate coverage for all employees. Section 42-1-360 specifies that the Act excludes
(1) Casual employees, as defined in § 42-1-130, and Federal employees in this State;
(2) Any person who has regularly employed in service less than four employees in the same business within the State or who had a total annual payroll during the previous calendar year of less than three thousand dollars regardless of the number of persons employed during that period;
(3) Textile Hall Corporation, an eleemosynary corporation whose principal object is the organizing and production of the Southern Textile Exposition;
(4) State and county fair associations; unless any such employer voluntarily elects to be bound by this Title, as provided by § 42-1-380.
(5) Agricultural employees; unless the agricultural employer voluntarily elects to be bound by this Title, as provided by § 42-1-380.
S.C.Code Ann. § 42-1-360 (Supp.2006);
see also Nolan v. National Sales Co., Inc.,
Addressing the minimum number requirement in exemption provisions like section 42-1-306(2), Professor Larson inculcates:
The controlling number of employees is determined in light of the employer’s established mode or plan in the operation of its business. If it regularly employs the requisite number, the employer remains covered although the numberemployed falls temporarily below the minimum. Ordinarily only such employees as would themselves be subject to the act are included in the count. Details of interpretation should be controlled by the underlying purpose of the exemption, which is to avoid administrative inconvenience to very small employers.
The most common problem under the usual wording of statutes conferring this type of exemption is the question of whether the employer “regularly” employs more than the minimum number. Since the practical effect of the numerical boundary is normally to determine whether compensation insurance is compulsory, an employer cannot be allowed to oscillate between coverage and exemption as its labor force exceeds or falls below the minimum from day to day. Therefore, if an employer has once regularly employed enough men to come under the act, it remains there even when the number employed temporarily falls below the minimum. The term “regularly employed” has been construed to embrace regularly-employed part-time as well as full-time workers. In all these cases, the fact that the number working at the exact time of injury was below the minimum is of course immaterial....
The question whether a particular employee should be disregarded for numerical-minimum purposes is very similar to the question whether he or she is a casual employee. It has been said that the two concepts are the same, and observation which, if true, would somewhat simplify the classification problem. As in the casual employment definition, both duration and regularity of recurrence are important factors. Thus, if the minimum number is exceeded on only eight of the one hundred and four days preceding the accident, the employer is not regularly employing the minimum. But if the number exceeds the minimum on seventeen out of twenty-seven days in the course of a construction job, the employer is covered.... It is the established mode or plan of operation of the business that is decisive.
4 Larson, Workers’ Compensation §§ 74.01-02 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
A. “Regularly Employed”
In
Harding v. Plumley,
we applied section 42-1-360(2) to a set of facts similar to those in the instant case. 329 S.C. at
Turning to the case
sub judice,
we focus on the definition of “regularly employed.” As noted in
Hording,
section 42-1-360 does not define the term “regularly employed.”
Courts should consider not merely the language of the particular clause being construed, but the word and its meaning in conjunction with the purpose of the whole statute and the policy of the law.
Whitner v. State,
Dictionaries can be helpful tools during the initial stages of legal research for the purpose of defining statutory terms.
Heilker v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals for City of Beaufort,
In the context of construing the statute, the term “regular” is often juxtaposed with the term “casual.” 4 Larson,
Workers’ Compensation
§§ 74.01-02 (“It has been said that the two concepts are the same ... in the casual employment definition, both duration and regularity of recurrence are important factors.”). Where employment cannot be characterized as permanent or periodically regular, but occurs by chance, or with the intention and understanding on the part of both employer and employee that it shall not be continuous, it is casual.
Smith v. Coastal Tire and Auto Service
Because South Carolina workers’ compensation law is fashioned after North Carolina’s statute, our courts often rely on North Carolina precedent for guidance in interpreting the
North Carolina courts have interpreted “regularly employed” as “employment of the same number of persons throughout the period with some constancy.”
Grouse v. DRB Baseball Management, Inc.,
B. Relevant Time Period
A priori, we must identify the relevant time period for determining whether a minimum number of persons were employed throughout the period with some constancy. This task is particularly difficult for employment in which workers come and go due to the nature and type of work they perform.
As Professor Larson edifies, the employer’s established mode or plan of operation dictates, to a large extent, the relevant time period, and both duration and regularity of occurrence are important factors. In
Harding,
the time roughly corresponding to the duration of the construction project constituted the relevant period.
Harding v. Plumley,
In
Patterson,
the North Carolina Supreme Court looked at the number employed six weeks prior to the claimant’s injury
In
Durham v. McLamb,
an employer hired four carpenters to work on a construction project in December, 1979.
The North Carolina Court of Appeals revisited this issue in
Grouse v. DRB Baseball Management, Inc.,
In the case at bar, Tickle left the Finish Company and engaged in itinerant projects to earn income while he was developing his business plan. His mode of operation was “project to project.” He claimed he initially attempted to form a partnership with the workers. Nevertheless, he paid the workers hourly wages, and that arrangement persisted throughout the period.
We determine the relevant time period for ascertaining whether Tickle regularly employed four or more employees with some constancy began when Claimant started working for Tickle on the beach chairs project. The period terminated shortly after Claimant’s injury, when Tickle ceased operating until he officially opened his business.
During the relevant period, the workers undertook three projects. Two people worked on the first project painting beach chairs. Three people worked on each of the two houses. Allegedly, a fourth employee continued to finish up work on the Garrett house while the others moved on to the next project. Claimant and Alie worked every weekday and some weekends after Tickle hired them; they expected their employment tó continue.
Tickle disavowed any employment relationship with the workers, professing instead to have formed a business partnership with them. The record provides little to substantiate Tickle’s assertion. Alternatively, Tickle admitted he hired the workers on a project-by-project basis, because he was just starting up his painting business.
We conclude Claimant and Alie were Tickle’s employees and not business partners. In addition, they were “regularly employed” workers during the relevant period. On the other hand, the greater weight of evidence indicates Franklin was not regularly employed by Tickle. Testimony about the duration of his employment was conflicting and inconclusive. Tickle disclaimed any knowledge that Franklin worked on any of the projects, though he was aware another individual might have worked on the Hewitt project. Moreover, Beth Garrett never observed more than three workers painting her house. Even if Victor worked for Tickle at the same time, but in another location, Claimant still fails to demonstrate Tickle regularly employed at least four workers with some constancy during the relevant period.
Claimant argues that three individuals were Tickle’s statutory employees under section 42-1-400 and should be counted to meet the jurisdictional requirement of four or more regular employees. We disagree.
The question of whether a worker is a statutory employee is jurisdictional and is therefore a question of law for the court.
Riden v. Kemet Electronics Corp.,
Section 42-1-400 defines an owner’s obligation to provide workers’ compensation coverage for the workmen of his subcontractor:
When any person, in this section and §§ 42-1-420 and 42-1-430 referred to as “owner,” undertakes to perform or execute any work which is a part of his trade, business or occupation and contracts with any other person (in this section and §§ 42-1-420 to 42-1-450 referred to as “subcontractor”) for the execution or performance by or under such subcontractor of the whole or any part of the work undertaken by such owner, the owner shall be liable to pay to any workman employed in the work any compensation under this Title which he would have been liable to pay if the workman had been immediately employed by him.
S.C.Code Ann. § 42-1-400 (Supp.2006).
In
Ost v. Integrated Prod., Inc.
4
,
the supreme court first addressed whether statutory employees of a subcontractor may be counted toward the number of employees required to bring the general contractor within the Act.
Ost, a pilot for Integrated, was killed in an airplane crash near Greenville, South Carolina.
Id.
at 242-43,
The court analyzed three South Carolina cases interpreting section 42-1-400 “to determine whether employees of a secondary employer constitute statutory employees of the principal employer.”
Ost,
In the leading case, Marchbanks v. Duke Power Company,190 S.C. 336 ,2 S.E.2d 825 (1939), this Court held that when a person performs work which is part of the trade or business of the principal, the employee^ of the person will be considered statutory employees of the principal. We concluded that a person who was injured while painting the power company’s pole was engaged in the ‘trade, business or occupation’ of the power company because the activity was an important part of the power company’s trade or business.
Likewise, in Boseman v. Pacific Mills,193 S.C. 479 ,8 S.E.2d 878 (1940), we held that when an activity performed by the employees of a subcontractor is necessary, or essential to, or an integral part of, the operation of the principal employer’s business, the employees of the subcontractor constitute the statutory employees of the principal employer. There, an employee of the subcontractor, who was painting a water tank at a mill, was killed when the tankcaught fire and exploded. Our court reasoned that the water tank, which provided essential protection to the mill against fires, was an integral part of the trade or business of the mill as to subject it to liability for the death of Boseman. This court espoused another test to determine whether an employee of a subcontractor was a statutory employee in Bridges v. Wyandotte Worsted Company, 243 S.C. 1 ,132 S.E.2d 18 (1963). In Bridges, the defendant contracted with an electric company, plaintiffs employer, to repair or replace the transmission line owned by the defendant and located on his property. The lines had been replaced on a previous occasion, and customarily maintained by a qualified crew regularly employed by the defendant. We concluded that the repair or replacement of the transmission lines was a part of the work ordinarily and customarily performed by the employees of the defendant in the prosecution of the defendant’s business. Finding the repair of the transmission lines was a part of the defendant’s trade or business, we held that the defendant was liable for the subcontractor’s employees’ injuries.
Id.
at 245,
Thus, a three-part test emerged to ascertain whether employees of a subcontractor are statutory employees of the general contractor.
Id.
at 246-47,
The
Ost
court concluded National Sales’ employees were statutory employees of Integrated and held those employees may be included to satisfy the four person jurisdictional requirement of Section 42-1-360(2).
Ost,
It was evidently realized by the General Assembly that it would not be fair to relieve the owner of compensation to employees doing work which was part of his trade or business by permitting such owner to sublet or subcontract some part of said work. Doubtless in many instances such contractor would be financially irresponsible, or the number of employees under him would be so small, as in this case, that such contractor would not be required under the Act to carry compensation insurance. It was therefore, provided under the first paragraph that where such work in which the employee was engaged was a part of the owner’s trade or business, the owner would be responsible in compensation to all employees doing such work, whether employees of an independent contractor or not.
Id.
at 247,
In
Harding,
Plumley engaged two subcontractors during the relevant time period to perform certain parts of the construction.
Here, Claimant asserted that three individuals— Rene, Fernando Lucas, and Claudio Gomez — -were statutory employees of Tickle and should be counted toward the jurisdictional minimum. Tickle disclosed that he hired Rene to finish up work after Claimant’s accident. He then explained Fernando Lucas was a finisher with whom he subcontracted to “do a couple of patches.” Tickle paid Lucas $120.00 on April 10, 2003, $40.00 on May 2, 2003, and $970.00 on July 31, 2003. Tickle issued a $750.00 check to Claudio Gomez on July 25, 2003.
5
The record substantiates that Fernando Lucas performed work that was an important part of Tickle’s painting business and a necessary and integral part of Tickle’s trade.
See Ost,
CONCLUSION
To promote the purpose of the Workers’ Compensation Act, the statute is to be construed liberally for the protection of the injured worker, with jurisdictional doubts generally resolved in favor of inclusion. We are, nevertheless, constrained to interpret the Act as it is written and do not have the power to expand its scope.
Taking our own view of the preponderance of the evidence, we conclude Tickle regularly employed less than four workers during the identified relevant time period. Tickle was exempt from the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Act when Claimant sustained his injury. The Appellate Panel of the Workers’ Compensation Commission did not have jurisdiction to consider his claim.
Accordingly, the decision of the circuit court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We decide this case without oral argument pursuant to Rule 215, SCACR.
. This witness is referred to in the Briefs on Appeal as Alie Hernandez. However, at the hearing the witness said his name was Alie Hernandez Alverez. For the sake of clarity we will refer to him as "Alie.” Additionally, Appellant's Brief refers to Rene' Alverez, as the worker who finished up after Claimant was injured. However, Tickle déclared the worker’s name was Rene' Everest. Assuming this is the same individual, we will refer to him as "Rene.”
. The second painting job is confusingly referred to as the Hewitt house in some parts of the record and as the Pitts house in other parts. For clarity we refer to the second house as the Hewitt house.
. The court distinguished
Nolan v. National Sales,
. We are unable to identify from the handwriting on this check the purpose of its issue.
