Opinion
In this appeal, we conclude that the doorman at a condominium complex is the employee of the condominium homeowners association, but is not the employee of the individual homeowners merely by virtue of their membership in the homeowners’ association. For this reason, we affirm the trial court’s determination that the doorman’s civil action against a negligent homeowner is not barred by the еxclusive remedy provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act.
Facts
Appellant Marjorie Roth is a condominium owner in Los Angeles. Incident to her ownership, she is a member of the homeowners association (the association) which governs the complex in which her condominium is located. The association is a nonprofit corporation. As a member of the association, Roth pays a monthly assеssment for the maintenance of the complex, as required by the association’s declaration of covenants, conditions and restrictions. A portion of the assessment paid by Roth is applied tо the casualty, liability and workers’ compensation insurance which the association is required to carry.
Respondent Emmet H. Holmes is employed as a doorman at Roth’s condominium complex. His salаry is paid by the association, and he is supervised by the project manager. On November 14, 1988, Holmes attempted to rescue Roth when her vehicle began to roll backwards in front of the condominium complex. In the process, Holmes was injured.
Holmes filed a workers’ compensation claim against the association with its insurance carrier, and received benefits from that policy. He also filed this lawsuit for personal injuries against Roth..
In March of 1991, Roth brought a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Holmes was her employee, that he was injured in the course and scope of his employment, and that workers’ compensation was his exclusive remedy. This motion was apparently denied, though the order does not appear in the record.
On August 9, 1991, the parties stipulated to the entry of judgment against Roth. Roth retained the right to аppeal the judgment, and agreed to pay *934 Holmes the sum of $100,000 in the event her appeal is unsuccessful. The trial court then entered judgment against Roth for $100,000, with the conditions stated in the stipulation. Appeal was taken from the judgment that same day. 1
Discussion
I
Roth contends that she is Holmes’s employer by virtue of her status as an association member whose dues support the association’s workers’ compensation insurаnce and Holmes’s salary. In essence, she believes that she and the association are synonymous.
A. Roth and the Association Are Separate Entities
In the case of
White
v.
Cox
(1971)
The court in
White
v.
Cox
posed two questions: (1) does the condominium association possess a sepаrate existence from its members? (2) do the members retain direct control over the operations of the association? (
As to the first question, the court answered that a condominium association fоrmed to handle the common affairs of the project must be considered a separate legal entity from its unit owners and association members. (17 *935 Cal.App.3d at pp. 829-830.) As to the second question, the сourt noted that each member often owns but a tiny fractional interest in the common areas of the condominium complex, and concluded that “in ordinary course a unit owner does not directly control the activities of the management body set up to handle the common affairs of the condominium project.” (Id. at p. 830.)
The
White
case was cited with approval by the Supreme Court in
Frances T.
v.
Village Green Owners Assn.
(1986)
The same аnalysis applies here. Although Roth pays into the common pool out of which Holmes’s salary and the association’s workers’ compensation insurance premium is paid, this fact does not make hеr Holmes’s employer. The incorporated nonprofit association to which Roth belongs possesses a separate legal existence from her own, and it alone controls Holmes’ emрloyment.
B. An Employer Is One Who Exercises Control Over an Employee
“The principal test of an employment relationship is whether the person to whom
service is
rendered has the right to control
the
manner and means of accomplishing the result desired.”
(Tieberg v. Unemployment Ins. App. Bd.
(1970)
The importance of these factors is not diminished merely because the employing entity happens to be a membership organization. In
Claremont C. Club v. Industrial Acc. Com.
(1917)
A caddy was injured while working for a member, and the question presented by the appeal was whether the injured caddy was an employee of the club for workers’ compensation purposes, or if, while the caddy rendered services, the individual member became “his master.” (
In this case, Roth presented no evidence that she exercised any control over Holmes’s employment as a doorman. She did not hire him and is not entitled to fire him. She does not dictate his working hours or the manner in which he performs his duties. Her sole dominion over Holmes is exercised in the brief moments when he holds open a door for her and helps her cаrry her belongings, much like the golf caddy who assists the members of a golf club during the course of a game, for their convenience and pleasure. Under the circumstances, there is no triable issue of fact concerning Roth’s ability to control or discharge Holmes: there is no evidence that she exercises the control of an employer over an employee.
C. The Authority Cited by Appellant Is Inapposite
Roth relies upon
Cowell
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(1938)
The
Cowell
case is distinguishable. First, it does not involve the specialized law pertaining to condominiums. The case also contains critical factual distinctions. The court found that a lime manufacturing corporation was operating a ranch, which was outside the scope of its lime business, “as an accommodation” to the ranch’s actual owners, the Cowells. The Cowells,
*937
who were undisclosed principals, wholly owned the ranch and took all the profits from it. There was a “direct connection” between the Cowells and the hiring of an employee who died as a result of injuries he sustained while working at the ranch. For this reason, the court found that the Cowells were the injured employee’s employers fоr workers’ compensation purposes. Significantly, the court observed that such a finding could not be sustained had the evidence “shown merely that [the Cowells] owned stock of the corporation which was operating the ranch, said ownership of stock and of property constituting [the Cowells’] sole connection with or relation to the injured laborer.” (
There is no evidence in the record in this casе of a direct connection between Roth and the hiring of Holmes. His hiring is solely a management function of the association. Roth’s ownership of a condominium—which gives her a 1/92 interest in the project—is her sole connection with Holmes. Thus, the Cowell case does not control here.
II *
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Turner, P. J., and Jackson, J., † concurred.
Notes
A consent or stipulated judgment is generally not appealable unless “consent was merely given to facilitate an appeal following adverse determinatiоn of a critical issue.”
(Building Industry Assn.
v.
City of Camarillo
(1986)
See footnote, ante, page 931.
Judge of the Municipal Court for the Antelope Judicial District sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
