In this workers’ compensation case, the administrative law judge awarded benefits to Foreman, an injured employee of Aqualine Environmental Services, against both his employer, Aqualine, 1 and Aqualine’s partner in a joint venture, Seckinger and Company. Seckinger and its insurer appealed to the board, which affirmed the award, and to the superior court, which also affirmed. The Court of Appeals denied their application to appeal, but we granted the application on certiorari in order to settle the question of whether a joint venturer is liable for the workers’ compensation benefits of the employees of its partner in the joint venture.
Seckinger and Aqualine bid upon and were awarded a
1. Seckinger argues that its agreement with Aqualine did not constitute a joint venture because profits and losses were not shared, because there was no pooling of labor or equipment, and because the employees were not paid and controlled by the joint venture but were paid and controlled by the partners who employed them. Seckinger argues further that we should look to the provisions of the contract rather than to its label.
The agreement was denominated a joint venture agreement and provided that it should be construed and deemed to be a joint venture. Thus the evidence authorized the finding against Seckinger that it was a joint venturer.
Carroll v. Mission Ins. Co.,
2. In
Boatman v. George Hyman Constr. Co.,
Seckinger relies on
City of Brunswick v. Taylor,
Argonaut Ins. Co. v. Head,
We find this Code section inapplicable here. It involves proration of payment, not the question of responsibility for payment at issue here, and presupposes two or more employers able to pay workers’ compensation benefits. Here the injured employee cannot recover from Aqualine or its insurer. It has been held many times that our workers’ compensation statute is to be construed in favor of employees in order to accomplish its beneficient purpose. See
General Motors Corp. v. Bowman,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Aqualine, who was insured by the New York State Insurance Fund which did not cover the injured Georgia employee, has since gone into bankruptcy.
