103 P.2d 15 | Colo. | 1940
THE sole question here presented for determination is whether defendant in error, a cooperative marketing association organized under the cooperative marketing law (S.L. 1923, p. 420, et seq., appearing as sections 14 to 45 inclusive, chapter 106, '35 C.S.A.), is required to pay contributions on the wages of individuals employed by it, under the provisions of the Unemployment Compensation Act, chapter 167A, 1939 Supplement, '35 C.S.A. In an action by the Industrial Commission seeking the recovery of such contributions, the district court upheld the contention of the association that under the definitions promulgated by the commission's regulation No. 6, the labor involved in the activities of the association was "agricultural labor" and exempt from the operation *225 of the Unemployment Compensation Act by section 19, paragraph (g) (6) A thereof. The commission here seeks a review of this adjudication.
The association is a nonstock, nonprofit, cooperative organization of agriculturists actively engaged in the business of growing fruit on farms and in orchards for the purpose of sale, and the operations of the association consist solely in marketing the fruit crops of its members, the remission of the proceeds therefrom after the payment of the expenses thereof on a prorata basis, and purchasing and distributing supplies to members for their use in growing and marketing their crops.
[1] When performed by a farmers' cooperative association the services here involved now are expressly exempted from the operation of the Federal Social Security Act. Internal Rev. Code, § 1607 (l) (4).
[2, 3] Section 19, paragraph (g) (6) A of the Colorado act, supra, without further exposition simply excepts "agricultural labor" from the purview of the act. Pursuant to section 11 (a) and (b) of the act, the commission in 1938 promulgated regulation No. 6 defining agricultural labor. So far as here pertinent this regulation provides: "The term `Agricultural Labor' includes all services performed — * * * (B) By an employee in connection with the processing of articles from materials which were produced on a farm; also the packing, packaging, transportation, or marketing of those materials or articles. Such services do not constitute `agricultural labor,' however, unless they are performed by an employee of the owner or tenant of the farm on which the materials in their raw or natural state were produced, and unless such processing, packing, packaging, transportation, or marketing is carried on as an incident to ordinary farming operations as distinguished from manufacturing or commercial operations, or unless the products grown were produced under ordinary field operations as distinguished from products specially cultivated under artificial structures or diggings. As used *226 herein the term `farm' embraces the farm in the ordinarily accepted sense, and includes * * * fruit * * * farms, * * * and orchards."
The commission complains that in determining that the questioned labor was agricultural, the trial court considered the three clauses of the second sentence of paragraph B of the regulation as though they were stated in the disjunctive and thus eliminated the provision that the labor must be performed "by an employee of the owner * * * of the farm * * *," which it argues is a conjunctive prerequisite of the definition. We do not understand this was quite the formula the trial court adopted, and surmise that in its concern over questions relating to the construction of the regulation the commission has overlooked the fundamentals controlling the controversy. It is certain that the products involved herein are purely agricultural in character and were produced under ordinary field operations on fruit farms and orchards. Thus the decisions in Great WesternMushroom Co. v. Industrial Commission,
The judgment is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HILLIARD not participating. MR. JUSTICE OTTO BOCK dissents.