39 S.E.2d 545 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1946
The court did not err in rendering judgment in favor of the defendant and in overruling the plaintiff's motion for new trial.
The plaintiff alleged that the defendant, as a covered employer under the Georgia Unemployment Compensation Law, had failed and refused to report certain individuals engaged in covered work for the defendant within the State; that an actual controversy had arisen and then existed between the plaintiff and the defendant as to whether said workers were employees of the defendant and entitled as such to the benefits provided by the law; that the relation of employer and employee, as defined in the act, existed between the defendant and said workers; that they were covered employees of the defendant; and that the defendant was liable for contributions levied by the act with respect to wages paid to said workers. The defendant denied these allegations, and contended that said workers were not employees of the defendant, but were employees of independent contractors engaged in the business of furnishing pulpwood to the defendant; that said workers were not entitled to the benefits provided under the law; that the defendant was not liable to the plaintiff for contributions with respect to wages paid to said workers; that the true relationship between the defendant and the pulpwood suppliers was that of purchaser and vendor; that the transactions between them were matters of bargain and sale.
The individuals whose work or earnings were the subject-matter of the controversy between the parties were employees of a class of contractors variously known as pulpwood operators, producers, or suppliers. These contractors purchased from Timber Lands, Incorporated, a wholly owned subsidiary of the defendant, organized by it as a land-holding company and as the wood-buying agency for the pulp mill of the defendant near Brunswick, Georgia, the right to cut and remove pulpwood from lands either owned outright or held under lease by it. The right to cut and remove pulpwood was sold to the contractors on a stumpage basis at a certain amount per unit, and the contractors then sold to the defendant the product or pulpwood sticks harvested on said lands at an agreed price per unit. The work performed by the employees involved consisted generally in felling and limbing the trees utilized for pulpwood purposes, and sawing them into blocks or sticks of a uniform length, and piling or stacking the wood, and hauling it either to the mill of the defendant, or to a point of delivery, and loading it on railroad cars.
Before the case was tried certain agreements were made by the parties and evidenced by written stipulations, which were approved *357 by the court and ordered filed as a part of the record. These stipulations included agreements that the primary and controlling question to be decided was whether or not the defendant was liable for an unemployment-compensation tax, with respect to the earnings of a certain class of persons (as above described) engaged in procuring pulpwood for use by the defendant at its mill, under the law of Georgia imposing such tax; that the case should be tried without the intervention of a jury, and the trial judge should act as judge and jury; and that "plaintiff is not bound by any statement of fact contained in defendant's answer which may be controverted by the evidence, nor is plaintiff bound by defendant's application of facts set out in its answer or by conclusions of law or fact pleaded therein," and "with the exceptions noted above, other statements of fact contained in defendant's answer need not be proved and will be considered by the court as having the force and effect of sworn evidence submitted by and in behalf of the defendant." The stipulations recited also that the case would be tried upon (a) stipulations agreed to by the parties, (b) statements of facts agreed to by the parties, and (c) testimony taken before or at the hearing. The brief of the evidence agreed to by the parties and approved by the court recites that, "Under the stipulations entered into between the parties and approved by the court, the allegations of fact contained in defendant's answer were treated as sworn testimony, except where such allegations were in conflict with other evidence adduced upon the hearing."
The trial resulted in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff's motion for a new trial was overruled, and the case is in this court for review.
In a very thorough and elaborate opinion, comprising more than 25 pages, the trial judge set forth certain findings of fact and conclusions of law, in holding that the defendant was not liable for the payment of the unemployment-compensation taxes claimed by the plaintiff. We think that the decision of the trial court was correct and that the judgment overruling the plaintiff's motion for new trial should be affirmed. Some of the provisions of the Unemployment Compensation Act should be construed strictly as a taxing statute (Jeffreys-McElrath Mfg. Co. v. Huiet,
Two theories on which liability for the tax is asserted are presented by the record. The plaintiff contends, in the first place, that the defendant is liable for the taxes or contributions, claimed by the plaintiff under the general provisions contained in the Code (Ann. Supp.), § 54-657 (h) (6), as follows: "Services performed by an individual for wages shall be deemed to be employment subject to this Chapter, unless and until it is shown to the satisfaction of the commissioner that: (A) Such individual has been and will continue to be free from control or direction over the performance of such services, both under his contract of service and in fact; and (B) Such service is either outside the usual course of business for which such service is performed, or that such service is performed outside of all the places of business of the enterprise for which such service is performed; and (C) Such individual is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business."
The second contention of the plaintiff is that, if the pulpwood operators or suppliers are independent contractors, a special provision of the act applies, namely: Code (Ann. Supp.), § 54-657 (f), which provides in effect that, when an employing unit contracts with another for work that is a part of its usual business, the employees of the contractor while engaged in such work are to be deemed employees of the employing unit for all purposes of the act. If the employing unit shall become liable for and pay contributions on account of such employees, it may recover the same from such contractor; and if the contractor is himself an employer within the meaning of the act, he alone is liable for such contributions on account of his employees.
As to the first of these contentions, that is, that the defendant is liable under the general provisions referred to above, the plaintiff devotes about 40 pages of his most excellent brief. He discusses with much earnestness and sincerity the meaning of the terms "employment" and "wages" as used in the act. He discusses in a skillful manner the meaning and scope of the so-called "ABC tests," under the Code (Ann. Supp.), § 54-657 (h) (6), as quoted above. All of the arguments respecting the application of these provisions of the act must be predicated on a relationship of employer and employee *359
between the defendant and the workmen involved. In other words, if the defendant purchased from pulpwood operators, producers, or suppliers products in the form of pulpwood sticks harvested by workmen of the operators, producers, or suppliers, such workmen would not necessarily be employees of the defendant. The application of the first proposition relied on by the plaintiff presupposes a relationship of employer and employee between the defendant and the workmen of the operators, producers, or suppliers. If such workmen were employed by persons other than the defendant, who merely sold the harvested products to the defendant, they would be servants or employees of their employers and not of the defendant, unless their employers were independent contractors engaged in work which was a part of the usual business of the defendant. The trial judge found as a matter of fact "that the employees of the suppliers here under consideration have not rendered services for remuneration for the defendant, but that such services were rendered for the suppliers and in the operation of the business operated by the suppliers;" and found as a conclusion of law "that employees of the suppliers are not employees of the defendant within the purview and intendment of the Unemployment Compensation Act of this State." These findings of fact and conclusions of law were authorized by the evidence. Therefore the principles announced and applied inHuiet v. Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co.,
The large number of cases from other jurisdictions, which seem to be in point on the question of supervision and control as evidencing a relationship of employer and employee, are not applicable, as that relationship was found by the court not to exist. The cases of Love Lumber Co. v. Thigpen,
The plaintiff says in his brief that, if this court should determine *361 that the workers involved are not covered employees of the defendant under the general provisions of the unemployment compensation law, the special provisions of the act contained in the Code (Ann. Supp.), § 54-657 (f), referred to above and relating to independent contractors, should be applied, and these workers would be entitled to compensation. The value of this contention depends entirely on whether the work of the independent contractors was a part of the "usual trade, occupation, profession, or business," of the employing unit (the defendant) in this case. The trial judge pointed out, in his very clear and comprehensive written decision, that whether or not the supplying of pulpwood to the mill of the defendant constituted a part of its usual business was a question of fact, and could be determined only by an inquiry into the usual, chosen, and customary method employed by the defendant in the operation of its business. In Jeffreys-McElrath Mfg. Co. v. Huiet, supra, it was held that this question was ordinarily one of fact. The mere fact that a commodity is essential and necessary in the operation of a business does not mean that the supplying of it is a part of the business. It may be admitted that pulpwood is a commodity essential to the operation of the defendant's business, but it does not necessarily follow that the work of supplying the mill with pulpwood is a part of the usual business operated by the defendant. It appears that about 86 percent of all the pulpwood used at the defendant's mill since it has been in operation was purchased from pulpwood suppliers under circumstances where the defendant admittedly was not liable for unemployment-compensation taxes on the earnings of the employees of the suppliers. Although it appears that the defendant has regularly used employees in protecting its timber from fire, in reforestation work on its lands, and in doing certain experimental work designed to test the utility of certain operational machinery on the market, using the timber cut for this purpose as pulpwood at the plant, and has at times had these workers cut a sufficient amount of pulpwood timber from its own lands to meet a temporary emergency — there was ample evidence to authorize the finding of the trial judge that "the service of supplying its mill with pulpwood does not constitute any part of the business operated by the defendant." It may be said also that the evidence authorized the finding that "the usual, customary, and *362 chosen method in supplying its mill with pulpwood was to purchase the same from pulpwood suppliers engaged in that business."
For the reasons pointed out by the trial judge in his decision. several foreign cases from Arizona, Virginia, South Carolina, and other States, cited by the plaintiff, are not applicable, because they differ substantially on their facts from the case at bar; but a recent Georgia case cited by counsel for both sides does seem to be in point. See Jeffreys-McElrath Mfg.Co. v. Huiet, supra. In that case the company was in the business of processing and selling lumber and lumber products. It owned and operated a sawmill and a planing mill. Rough lumber was an essential commodity in the operation of the company's business. It owned or held under lease large tracts of timbered lands acquired for the specific purpose of supplying its plant with lumber. It received its entire supply of lumber from timber standing on lands that it either owned or held under lease. The process of converting the standing trees into lumber included the felling of the trees, the sawing of the trees into logs, the hauling of the logs to the mill, the sawing of the logs into lumber, and the hauling of the lumber to the finishing plant or mill of the company. All of these services, except the processing of the lumber in the mill of the defendant, were performed by contract with third persons, some of whom performed only one service while others performed two or more. The Supreme Court held that all of these operations and services, except the hauling of the rough lumber from the mills of the contractors to the plant of the company near Macon, were parts of the usual business operated by the company, but that such hauling "would constitute no part of the defendant's usual business within the meaning of the statute."
We think that this ruling, in the light of the facts found and determined by the judge in the present case, is controlling as to the second contention of the plaintiff. The court found as a matter of fact — and we think that the evidence authorized such finding — that "the sale of timber (stumpage) by the defendant to the suppliers for pulpwood purposes and the sale of pulpwood by the suppliers to the defendant are bona fide transactions and are made in due course of trade." The plaintiff expressly disclaimed the charging of any fraud to the defendant, although the arrangement whereby the defendant sold stumpage rights to the suppliers, and then purchased from them the pulpwood sticks harvested by them, is *363 described as "notably unusual and quite unique." The court properly concluded as a matter of law that the pulpwood suppliers were independent contractors engaged in the operation of independently established businesses; and that the service of supplying the defendant's plant with pulpwood did not constitute a part of the usual business operated by the defendant. Therefore the services rendered by the employees of the independent-contractor suppliers were not a part of the usual trade, occupation, profession, or business of the defendant, and such workmen were not employees of the defendant under the independent-contractor provisions of the act.
The court did not err in deciding the case in favor of the defendant and in overruling the plaintiff's motion for new trial.
Judgment affirmed. Sutton, P. J., and Felton, J., concur.