Petitioner seeks certiorari to review an order of the Industrial Commission affirming an order of a deputy commissioner denying his claim for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
The employer undertook to build a small fishing cabin for her private use. The petitioner, who was regularly employed as a carpenter for a construction company, performed intermittent work on the cabin in his spare time at an hourly wage over a period of approximately three weeks prior to the date of the injury. During that period four other persons also worked intermittently on the project, and on only one occasion during that time, and then only for a period of several hours, were there ever as many as three persons working on the project at one time. At no time prior to the injury was any person regularly employed on the project or employed in such manner as to establish a pattern.
The point for decision is whether the claimant’s employment on this project is within the purview of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, which defines the word “employment” as “all private employments in which three or more employees are employed by the same employer.” F.S. § 440.-02(1) (b) 2, F.S.A.
Unlike those of most states, our Act contains no words explaining or defining the nature, continuity, or duration of “employment” which serves to activate the law. In Alabama it is provided that the requisite number must be regularly employed (Mobile Liners v. McConnell,
The elements of regularity, continuity, common employment, etc., have generally been interpreted as referring to the character of the work in which the persons were employed, however brief or extended, and not to the character of employment, whether casual, occasional, or otherwise; and the Act has usually been held to apply where the requisite number of persons have been engaged, however intermittently, to do work in the common or usual business of the employer. Palle v. Industrial Commission,
It is also the general rule that coverage is imposed where there is uniformity of practice in the particular business of the employer and the requisite number of employees are employed, and coverage is not lifted in such cases where, for a short period, the number falls below the statutory minimum. Teague v. State Industrial Commission,
“The Legislature did not contemplate that mere temporary, though regularly recurring, employment brought the employer within the act. Its language must be taken in its ordinary and usual significance. In ordinary language when it is said that an employer employs four or more employes in a common employment it is meant that he usually does so, or that he does so most of the time, so that such employment becomes the rule and not the exception. The act operated upon and was intended to include only such employers as ordinarily or for some considerable length of time employed four or more employes in a common employment.”
In order, therefore, to bring employment within the purview of our Act, it was necessary to show the existence of an established mode or plan of hiring three or more persons pursuant to some constant or periodic custom resulting in a numerical pattern of employment that becomes the rule and not the exception. See LaCroix v. Frechette,
Certiorari denied.
