Appeal from a decision and award of the Workmen’s Compensation Board. The Ramapo Land Company, Inc., entered into a contract with J. Pedersen and T. Olsen for a specified price to do the carpentry work on a home which it was building on its land for the use of its superintendent. The intestate of claimant-administrator, a carpenter, was killed on the job. Pedersen and Olsen were not insured in New York; the Workmen’s Compensation Board, on re-examining the case has found that the actual supervision by Ramapo Land Company over the construction work and the carpenters engaged in it was so detailed and complete that it was an employer of the decedent. The issue on this question is sharply contested, but the record - as now developed contains proof that Ramapo’s superintendent, for whom the house was being built, directed the carpentry work in detail. Theodore Olsen testified that “he made his own plan”, that “he gave the orders direct” to “ the men and to myself ”; that the progress of the work differed from the usual carpentry contract and that Ramapo’s superintendent in effect controlled the building operation in detail. There is other proof in the same direction. It is sufficient to spell out control and to sustain the finding of an employer-employee relationship with the decedent. Award affirmed, with costs to the Workmen’s Compensation Board. Foster, P. J., Bergan, Gibson and Reynolds, JJ., concur; Herlihy, J., dissents in the following memorandum: The employer herein, Ramapo Land Company, entered into a written contract with J. Pedersen and T. Olsen — herein referred to as the individuals — to do carpenter work on a house being built on the employer’s property. It was drawn by Ramapo and accepted by the “ individuals ” and its terms were definite and unambiguous, providing in part: “you [Pederson and Olsen j are to have all necessary insurance protection including compensation and liability ”. In attempting to carry out this provision, the “individuals” procured a
