DocketNumber: No. 31017.
Citation Numbers: 212 P.2d 489, 35 Wash. 2d 291, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 336
Judges: Grady, Schwellenbach
Filed Date: 12/15/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Over a period of years the Raymond and Bunting families of Yakima were engaged in business of a character which required them, as employers, to contribute to the industrial accident fund. They operated under various names. At times they operated as partners and at other times through corporate entities. Persons closely associated with the families had at times financial interests with them.
About July 1, 1943, the Artificial Ice and Fuel Company and the Rainier Fruit Company were formed as partnerships. Prior to that date, there had been in existence three corporations, Yakima Artificial Ice and Cold Storage Company, City Ice Delivery Company, and Rainier Fruit Corporation. The Yakima Artificial Ice and Cold Storage Company was dissolved and its assets transferred to the two newly formed partnerships. The City Ice Delivery Company became dormant, but remained in existence. Rainier Fruit Corporation became dormant and its operations were continued by the Rainier Fruit Company, a partnership. The business previously conducted by the corporations was conducted by the partnerships from July 1, 1943, until August 29, 1947. The partnerships filed reports upon their *Page 293 employees, as was required by the department of labor and industries and earned favorable merit ratings.
About August 29, 1947, City Ice Delivery Company, the dormant corporation, amended its articles of incorporation, changing its name to Artificial Ice and Fuel Company, and increasing its authorized capital stock. On that date, the assets of the partnership of the same name were transferred to the corporation. In exchange for these assets, all of the additional capital stock of the corporation was issued to the members of the former partnership in a dollar-for-dollar ratio on the basis of the worth of the assets as owned by the partners. Substantially the same procedure was followed by Rainier Fruit Corporation, the dormant corporation. It changed its name to Rainier Fruit Company and took over the operations of the partnership of the same name.
Prior to the amendment of the articles of incorporation of the dormant corporations, all of their stockholders were members of the partnerships. No material change was made in any of their books of account, or in any of their methods of operation. Since the dates of their reorganizations, the corporations have carried on the identical business activities and followed the identical policies as were formerly carried on by the respective partnerships.
The department of labor and industries, treating the respondents as new employers, assigned to them new firm numbers and new basic rate structures. These rates were in excess of the merit rates theretofore earned by the partnerships. The trial court concluded that the changes made in the entities by and through which the parties transacted their business were changes in legal structure only and not of substance, and therefore the status of new employers was not created.
The governing statute is Rem. Supp. 1947, § 7676c, which provides as follows:
"Every employer who shall enter into any business or commence any operation subject to industrial insurance classification, shall, before so commencing notify the Director of Labor and Industries of such fact, accompanying such notification with an estimate of his payroll and workmen *Page 294 hours for the first calendar month of his proposed operations, and shall make payment of the premium on such estimate with adjustments to be subsequently made. Every such employer shall pay the full basic rate until such time as an experience rating in excess of a one year period may be computed as of a first succeeding July first date, and shall be liable for a premium of at least one dollar ($1.00) per month irrespective of the amount of his workmen hours reported during said month to the Department: Provided, That any employer who has had an experience rating and made payment on the merit basis for any operation subject to any industrial insurance classification within the fiscal year preceding the fiscal year in which he resumes that operation or in the current fiscal year, or an employer who resumes an operation in the same fiscal year in which he ceased that operation and who would have had an experience rating in such year had he not ceased such operation, shall be entitled to be restored to his merit rating by class based on his previous experience: Provided, further, That no other resuming employer shall have his preceding experience whether or not such experience shall have been in the preceding five years except as herein provided for a new employer."
The purpose of the merit rating is to furnish an inducement to employers to reduce the demands upon the industrial insurance fund caused by injuries sustained by their employees. During the time the employer operates under such rating, he pays less money into the fund. The statute contemplates that, when a merit rating is once earned by an employer, it should continue so long as he is entitled thereto. He may cease to be an employer for a time, but when he resumes he may be restored to his merit rating.
The question now before the court is whether the Raymond and Bunting families, have finally decided to transact their business through corporate entities, have abandoned their former status and become new employers and subject to the basic rates.
We decided in the case of Monroe Logging Co. v. Department ofLabor Industries,
In the case of Puget Sound Bridge Dredging Co. v. Departmentof Labor Industries,
[1] We think the proper rule to be applied in cases of this kind is that, where parties engaged in business earn a merit rating, the mere fact that they change from a corporation to a partnership or from a partnership to a corporation is not such a change of employer that they lose their merit rating. If the change is in legal structure only, and was one of form and not of substance, as found by the trial judge in *Page 296 the cases before us, then the business is entitled to retain its merit rating.
The judgments are affirmed.
SIMPSON, C.J., MALLERY, and DONWORTH, JJ., concur.