Stack v. Boonton Board of Education
Stack v. Boonton Board of Education
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In this workers’ compensation matter the sole issue concerns the computation of wages for compensation purposes in a case in which the petitioner holds three jobs for the same employer. The judge of compensation concluded that the three jobs were independent of each other, selected one and based the compensation rate on the salary paid for that one on the theory that it was “during his employment” on that job that he was injured. We reverse.
On the day of the accident, Stack commenced his employment at 6:30 in the morning at a universal gym weight lifting program at the school open to all students. He was in charge of this program. The participation was not just by athletes but also by “kids in that also who were not involved in sports but just wanted to be in a weight lifting program.” According to his uncontradicted testimony, he then supervised his homeroom and taught his classes in mathematics, meeting just before lunch with a few of his football players who were having some scholastic difficulties. After his teaching assignments were through, he met with a college football coach respecting whether he “had any football players that ... met all his academic and football standards.” Following the school day he devoted a half hour to “extra help for the math kids” and then he
Stack and the principal went home separately. On the way home Stack was involved in an automobile accident which left him a totally and permanently disabled paraplegic.
As noted above, the sole issue is whether the wages for the employment should be aggregated for determination of the compensation rate, or whether that rate should be determined only on the salary paid for coaching football, as the judge of compensation determined. The Board argues that the jobs are separate and distinct. Petitioner insists that they are a single employment, but even if they are not, they represent joint and concurrent employment.
We can conceive of no reason why the simple expedient of three separate contracts, allocating the salary which the Board was paying Stack for the work he did for them into proportionate amounts, should cause employment by the same employer of the same person to be considered three separate employments. This is especially so where the qualification for one of the jobs was conditioned upon qualification for another: Stack needed teacher certification before he would be considered for the football coaching position.
Beyond this, the nature of the various tasks confounds line drawing. When Stack supervised the weight lifting activity in the morning, was he employed as a football coach, a golf coach or a mathematics teacher? Did his efforts to assist football players having scholastic troubles with their schoolwork convert Stack from a football coach to a scholastic counselor or a
The judge of compensation was disposed to his determination by his conclusions, “While petitioner worked for a single employer, he obviously operated under three contracts of employment. His duties under each were separate and distinct from the others. Accordingly, petitioner held three separate jobs with the Boonton Board of Education and each was independent of the other.” (Emphasis supplied.) The questions we have suggested above convince us that the italicized conclusions cannot spring from any findings reasonably reached on sufficient credible evidence in the whole record. The fact is inescapable that while Stack’s employment was divided into three different jobs — and apparently a few more without portfolio — there was an ineluctable intermingling and overlapping.
While there are numerous dual employment and joint and concurrent employment cases, there is a paucity of case law in New Jersey dealing with employment by one employer of one employee in several jobs which are undertaken essentially concurrently. Two old cases are informative.
In Bollinger v. Wagaraw Building Supply Co., 18 N.J.Misc. 1, 11 A.2d 367 (C.P. 1939) the employee was employed as a machine operator and as a watchman. In addition to separately apportioned pay for those two jobs, he was provided with a house and utilities. A judgment was entered in the (then) Workmen’s Compensation Bureau aggregating these salaries and including an allowance to represent the house and utilities. The judge of Common Pleas on his review agreed, concluding:
... Both employments ... are so connected and interrelated as to be but one within the contemplation of the act. The mere fact that Bollinger’s hiring as a*126 watchman and caretaker commenced at a time subsequent to his other employment does not change the situation. The contract of employment as a watchman and caretaker was a modification of, or supplement to the original hiring. On the day of the accident, Bollinger was rendering service to his employer in both capacities, and the contract of hiring, using this term in a broad sense, covered all of the work being performed by Bollinger. [18 N.J.Misc. at 4,11 A. 2d at 368-369.]
A similar result was achieved in Lukawich v. Phelps Dodge Copper Products Corp., 18 N.J.Misc. 351, 13 A. 2d 568 (C.P. 1940) by a different Common Pleas judge. Here petitioner was employed as a caster. His employer also paid him to keep the furnaces going over the weekend so that the casting could begin on Monday without delay. Here the judge held that “decedent was employed ... under one general employment, part of which was to act as caster and part to act as watchman.” 18 N.J.Misc. at 353, 13 A.2d at 569. The wages were aggregated and the employment was held to be for a seven-day week.'
In like fashion we are satisfied that petitioner here was employed in one general employment part of which was as a mathematics teacher, part as a football coach and part as a golf coach.
In a remarkably similar case, New York has come to the same conclusion. There a physical education teacher who received “an additional stipend” for coaching the track and football team, was held to have earned an aggregated salary in the employment. The court, eschewing a finding of dual and dissimilar employments, said:
... Clearly, this was not the ease. The record indicates that all of the claimant’s work activities and duties were totally integrated and had as their foundation one skill, that of teaching. Furthermore, even if there were dual employments rather than a single employment, they would be similar in nature and character and the average weekly wage would have to be determined by combining the weekly wages of the “dual” or “concurrent” employments [citation omitted]. [Orbinati v. Utica Mutual Ins. Co., 64 A.D.2d 725, 725, 406 N.Y.S.2d 604, 605 (App.Div. 1978).]
The result we reach is consistent with the apparent policy of the Department of Education. That policy considers scholastics and athletics as integrated parts of the school curriculum as is obvious from N.J.A.C. 6:29-6.3(a). This directs that “[n]o person not certified as a teacher and not in the employ of a board
The result is also consistent with our time-honored policy of construing “the workmen’s compensation act so as to comport with its presumptive beneficent and remedial objectives favorable to injured workmen rather than to be bound by its coldly literal import.” Paul v. Baltimore Upholstering Co., 66 N.J. 111, 136 (1974).
Since, eoncordantly with the authorities we have cited, we come to the conclusion that petitioner’s employment was a matter of one employment for one employer, we need not consider the various ramifications of our law relating to joint and concurrent employment.
We reverse and remand to the Division of Workers’ Compensation for entry of a judgment in favor of petitioner based on an aggregation of his wages in the employment of the Boonton Board of Education.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOHN T. STACK v. BOONTON BOARD OF EDUCATION, RESPONDENT-RESPONDENT
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published