Plaintiff (Jackson) sued and recovered judgment after a court trial against defendants (the Pancakes) on actions under common counts for the reasonable yalue of labor and materials. Judgment was for $901.89. Jackson was nоt a licensed contractor during the performance of any of the work for which he sued.
The broad question on appeal is whether the action is barred under Business and Professions Code section 7031. 1 The narrower question is whether the court correctly determined that plaintiff was an employee (§7053) and furnished materials incidentally as a materialman (§7052) and not a contractor as defined by Business and Professions Code section 7026, which provides inter alia that “ [t]he term contractor ... is synonymous with the term ‘ builder' and ... a contractor is any person, who undertakes to . . . construct, alter, repair, add to [etc.] any building ... or other structure. ...” We hold that substantial evidence justified thе trial court’s conclusion that Jackson did not violate the statutes referred to.
' .Jackson operated a plumbing supply and paint shop in Central Valley, a small community in Shasta County. He was also,.a nonunion plumber. When Jackson was out doing plumbing work his wife tended store. In June 1964 the Pancakes were remodeling their theater. One of them, Dan Pancake, approached Jackson about the installation of the plumbing in two bathrooms of the theater. Jackson advised him to get a contractor. He informed Pancake he was neither a licensed contractor nor a union plumber. A few days later Dan Pancake again asked Jackson to undertake the work. After contemplation, Jackson consented. Pancake asked for an estimate. He described the work to be done and the fixtures and plumbing supplies to be installed and the conditions already existing under the building (specifically regarding the water pipes). Basing his estimate upon that information, Jackson said the work would cost between $1,000 and $1,200. Plaintiff’s charge for his labor was to be $5 per hour. Fixtures and materials, if in plaintiff’s stock, were to be сharged for at retail, if not in stock at cost plus 10 percent, and sales *309 tax was to be added for all materials. The record permits reasonable inference that the Pancakes knew and agreed to this labor аnd materials pricing arrangement.
Jackson started working when Dan Pancake told him to. Conditions under the building were not as. Pancake had described. The water pipe had to be replaced, .with a larger, one. There were other changes and other work was added, e.g., two additional bathrooms, plumbing in an adjacent building; also a cooler was installed in the Pancake home.
Dan Pancake was on the job at all times. Jackson was tоld' specifically what he was to do. Instructions were changed from time to time. Helpers, when provided, were hired by -the Pancakes; also Dan Pancake hired other artisans and supervised their work. Jackson did not bill for his work оn a weekly or other periodical basis.
On July 10, 1964, Jackson delivered to Dan Pancake bills' for all of his labor (at $5 per hour) up to that time and for' most of the materials furnished. (Bills for items picked up at Jackson’s store had prеviously been submitted.) At the trial' Dan Pancake admitted this billing. The Pancakes stress the fact that one part of Jackson’s work did.not pass inspection, and that he did not .charge for the timé required to redo that work.
The Pancakes hаd paid Jackson $500 prior to the July 10th • billing. According to Jackson the Pancakes at no. time expressed dissatisfaction with any of his work (in fact, one of them had complimented him both on his work and the savings they had realized), and they did not object to his bill submitted on July 10th. But Jackson was told the Pancakes would have to sell bonds to pay the amounts due. Jackson objected and on July 14th he received, a further payment of $550. No sums were withheld for tax purposes from thе payments on acpount of his earnings. August 21st a last billing was submitted. After a protracted period the bill was not paid and' this action was brought.
There were conflicts in the evidence. "We follow the well-settled rule that a reviewing сourt must resolve such conflicts in favor of the prevailing party.
We have quoted above section 7031 which not only makes it illegal for a person to act as a. contractor without obtaining a license but imposes аs a penalty denial of access to . the courts to recover for the fruits of his labor or even for materials furnished when he violates the statute. (See fn'. 1.) These licensing statutes were intended to protect - the .publiс ■
*310
against dishonesty and incompetency in the administration of the contracting business as well as in the actual performance of the contract.
(Lewis & Queen
v.
N. M. Ball Sons
(1957)
Earlier this court had decided
Martin
v.
Henderson
(1954)
Other appellate courts on somewhat similar facts have reached similar conclusions. One of them,
Dwight
v.
Leonard
(1959)
The trial judge in his memorandum of decision based his finding upon the
Cargill, Dwight
and
Martin
cases and distinguished the facts here involved from those of
Phillips
v.
McIntosh, supra,
We similarly distinguish them. The Pancakes have cited elements likening certain activities of the parties to a contractual arrangement, e.g., the deferred billing, the fact nothing was held for withholding tax. They ignore the outweighing evidence of the employer-employee relationship. (See
Rodoni
v.
Harbor Engineers
(1961)
True, in determining intent, the absence of the withholding of any portion of Jackson’s wages by the Pancakes was a factor to be taken into consideration by the trial court. It is not. decisive. Sections 7026 and 7031 were not enacted to penalize violations of withholding tax provisions.
Our California Supreme Court has recognized that the penalties of section 7031 are harsh and that “ [i] n view of the severity of this sanction and of the forfeitures which it necessarily entails, our decisions record our reluctance to construe the statute more broadly than requisite to the achievement of its manifest .purpose.”
(Latipac, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1966)
We hold it was not the “manifest purpose” of the contractors’ licensing law to proscribe arrangements between workmen and owners such as that here involved.
The Pancakes’ argument that the common counts were improperly pleaded cannot be upheld. Defendants were fully apprised of the claims for which they must answer. The case was properly tried within the issues.
(Martin
v.
Henderson, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Friedman, J., and Regan, J., concurred.
Notes
All section references in this opinion are to the Business and Professions Code. Section 7031 provides in material part: “No person . . . acting in the capacity of a contractor, may bring or maintain any action in any court of this state for the collection of compensation for the performance of any act or contract for which a license is required by this chapter without alleging and proving that he was a duly licensed contractor at all times during the performance of such act or contract. . . .”
Those sections read as follows: Section 7052: " This chapter does not apply to any person who only furnishes materials or supplies without fabricating them into, or consuming them in the performance of, the work of the contractor.’’ Section 7053: "This chapter does not apply to any person who engages in the activities herein regulated, as an employee with wages as Ms sole compensation, ’
