269 A.D. 713 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1945
(dissenting). During the years in question the appellant operated a ballroom in the city of New York, and therein provided certain facilities for dancing by such members of the public as became its patrons. In doing this from time to time it engaged certain well known maestros and their “ named ” orchestras or bands to render their services in producing dance music at stated performances. Whether, under the arrangements whereby such engagements were secured, the leaders and members of the orchestras were employees of the appellant within the meaning of the statute (Unemployment Insurance Law [Labor Law] formerly § 502, now § 511) or instead, the relation was one arising from an independent contract, is the question presented by this appeal. In all the instances in question the engagements of the orchestras and their leaders were secured by written contracts, the general provisions of which were generally uniform in substance.
Before these were entered into the practice was that one or more of appellant’s officers would confer with the leader of the orchestra to be engaged, or his agent, often witness an audition, and then fix upon the date and time for the rendition of the music, the lump sum price to be paid therefor to the leader or maestro, the number of the members or units of the orchestra or band which was to perform and such other details as pertained to the furnishing of the particular engagement. This was then followed by the formal execution of the written contract signed by the appellant and by the leader of the orchestra or his agent. The uncontradieted evidence is such as to clearly stamp and define the appellant’s engagements of the orchestras and their leaders as an independent contract whereby the leader of a given orchestra would fulfill the contracted engagement under his conductorship, by producing dance music of his own selection at the time and place agreed upon, rendered by a designated number of musicians of his own choosing and hiring. The proofs make it clear that in fulfilling the engagement neither the leader of the orchestra nor the members thereof were subject to any orders, directions or control by appellant whatsoever as to the means which were to be used to achieve the agreed result of the production of modern dance music. The members of the orchestras were in all instances members of the American .Federation of Musicians, and most of them, if not all, of Local 802, having exclusive jurisdiction in New York City. In all the instances under review the written contracts which appellant entered into contained provisions to the effect that it was agreed that “the laws, rules and regulations” of the aforesaid federation “are a part of this contract”; and it was further provided therein that the “employer agrees to abide by and conform to the constitution, by-laws, rules and regulations ” of said federation “and/or its locals affected thereby”. A by-law of said Local
The employment of service by means of agreement with an independent contractor does not constitute the employees of the latter, employees of the other party, even under the statutory definitions. (Matter of Morton, 284 N. Y. 167, 173, 175.) The historic distinction between an employee and such a contractor still applies, and the terms employed in the written agreement do not confine the inquiry. In Matter of Morton (supra, p. 175) it is said: “ It follows that, while an employer may elect to engage an independent contractor rather than an employee, no written agreement may preclude an examination to determine whether the actual relationship is such as to bring the parties within the scope of the law.” -If, then, the terms of the agreement must yield to the actualities in a case where the legal relationship of employer and employee is concealed by language, it follows that the terms which pretend or “ deem ” such relationship to exist must also yield where the evidence is to the contrary. The words of a written contract descriptive of the relationship of the parties may not bar inquiry and determination of the true relationship. Actualities control. (Matter of Fidel. Assn. of New York, Inc., 259 App. Div. 486, affd. 287 N. Y. 626. See, also, Matter of Glielmi v. Netherland Dairy Co., 254 N. Y. 60.) Here the uncontradicted evidence establishes the contrary. That the burden of unemployment insurance is designed to be unescapably placed upon the true employer seems as implicit in the statute as the express prohibition of an employee to waive it. (Labor Law, § 512.) Such a shifting of the burden, by ‘‘ deeming ” a relationship to exist, which otherwise, in fact and law, does not obtain, would prevent and endanger the statutory objectives. “ Legislative words are not -inert, and derive vitality from the obvious purposes at which they are aimed * * *. Taxes cannot be escaped ‘by anticipatory arrangements and contracts however skillfully devised * * * by which the fruits are attributed to a different tree from that on which they grew.’ ’’ (Griffiths v. Commissioner, 308 U. S. 355, 358.)
The decision appealed from should be reversed on the law, and the initial determination of the Industrial Commissioner annulled, with costs.
Hill, P. J., Heffernan and Foster, JJ., concur in decision; Brewster, J., dissents in opinion in which Lawrence, J., concurs.
Determination affirmed on the authority of Matter of Ajello (259 App. Div. 949, leave to appeal denied 284 N. Y. 818); Matter of Camgros (264 App. Div. 973, affd. in part 290 N. Y. 838).