250 P. 570 | Cal. | 1926
The petitioners sought and obtained a writ of certiorari to review a decision of the Industrial Accident *579 Commission awarding Frank M. Downing compensation for injuries received while shingling a building, the sole question presented being whether or not Downing was an independent contractor or an employee of the petitioner Hillen. It was stipulated before the Commission that if Downing was in fact an employee of Hillen, the injury he received arose out of and in the course of his employment.
The facts are without conflict. Hillen was engaged in the business of building and selling homes in the city of Oakland. Downing was a shingler by trade. Some time before the accident in question he called on E.W. Urch, Hillen's superintendent, and, referring to the particular job, asked "if the shingling was let." It being customary in the building business to have shingling done "at so much per thousand," he left with Urch a card on which was written his name and telephone number and a notation which read "$1.25 — thousand, 3 cts. for ridges," that being the price for which he was willing to lay the shingles. When the house was ready for shingling the superintendent sent for Downing and put him to work. After the first negotiations, which were as above related, Downing worked on a number of houses, he apparently being the only one doing any shingling for Hillen during that period. The arrangement under which he worked was, as testified to by Superintendent Urch, "a mutual understanding when he would come on the job it would be $1.25 a thousand, and there was nothing further said about the agreement to shingle, and when each job was done the bill would be made per thousand, and I would O.K. it, send it to the office and it would be paid." On the first jobs the superintendent watched Downing very closely until satisfied that he was a competent shingler. As Downing proved to be a careful workman only occasional directions were given to him at that or any subsequent time, but the shingling was always under the watchful supervision of Hillen's superintendent or foreman. Hillen furnished the shingles, nails and other materials required for shingling the houses, and all necessary ladders and other appliances for the work. His superintendent, or the foreman on the job, estimated and ordered the number of shingles required, and Downing put them on. Downing used his own shingler's hatchet, "snips" for cutting valley tin, and shingler's apron. For the purpose of *580 "rushing" two or three jobs on which he worked Downing was directed by Urch to get other shinglers to assist him. Neither Hillen nor his superintendent had any part in the employment of the extra men. Downing collected the amount due for the shingling and paid them the same amount he was getting for his own work. Neither Downing nor the extra shinglers who worked with him were carried on Hillen's pay-roll. Downing was not required to work any specified number of hours. When a house was finished he made out his bill "so many thousand shingles, so many feet of ridges. [Urch] would O.K. it, send it to the office and [Downing] would get his check."
By the terms of the Workmen's Compensation Law (Stats. 1917, p. 831) "every person in the service of an employer . . . under any appointment or contract of hire" is an employee. (Sec. 8a.) Any person rendering service for another, other than as an independent contractor, or as expressly excluded by the provisions of the act, is presumed to be an employee. (Sec. 8b.) It is admitted that Downing was at the time of his injury actually performing service for Hillen. Consequently, the burden of proof rests upon Hillen to establish that Downing was an independent contractor. (Sec. 19d [1].) It was therefore necessary for him to show that Downing was, within the definition of the term, a person rendering "service, other than manual labor, for a specified recompense for a specified result, under control of his principal as to the result of his work only and not as to the means by which such result is accomplished." (Sec. 8b.) Whether or not the relation of employer and employee existed in this case, under the oral contract entered into, is a question of mixed law and fact, to be proved like any other question. The finding of the Commission, in effect, that the relation existed between Hillen and Downing is binding on this court. (Pacific Gas Elec. Co. v. Industrial Accident Com.,
We are of the view that Downing did not contract to produce results through means and men chosen by himself, but that the arrangement was one by which he engaged to give his own personal services. The facts do not import an employment to do a job of shingling, but a contract to lay shingles at a price per thousand, instead of by the day. The evidence on the point is very clear. Downing testified that he sometimes got more and sometimes got less than $1.25 per thousand for shingling; that sometimes he worked by the day, getting $8 a day; that it is more advantageous to work at $1.25 a thousand; that he could not always get a job shingling by the day, and worked for Hillen at the rate per thousand because at that price he gained on his work, and Hillen gave him all his work to do. Hillen testified that he instructed his superintendent, Urch, to "let it [the shingling] out on a contract," which meant, he further testified, "nothing more than that he [was] to pay a certain rate per thousand." According to his testimony, also, it is "a custom to lay shingles by the thousand. Pretty near every builder and contractor does it that way, in fact most of the good shinglers, — that is the only way they will do it because they can make more money that way than they can by the straight day work."
A workman who is paid wages by the piece or quantity comes within the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act the same as one who is paid by the day. Wages may be measured by time, by the piece, or by any other standard. (McKinstry v.Guy Coal Co.,
The award is affirmed.
Shenk, J., Richards, J., Finch, J., pro tem., and Finlayson, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.