IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO 
Docket No. 30931 
EXCELL CONSTRUCTION, INC., 
Employer Account: 001790501, 
Employer-Appellant, 
v. 
STATE OF IDAHO, DEPARTMENT OF 
LABOR, 
Respondent. 
))))))))))) 
Boise, April 2005 Term 
2005 Opinion No. 80 
Filed: June 21, 2005 
Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk 

Appeal from the Industrial Commission. 
Industrial Commission ruling reversed and remanded for further proceedings. 
Wetzel & Wetzel, Coeur d’Alene, for appellant. Dana L.R. Wetzel argued. 
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. Anne Baker 
Wilde, Deputy Attorney General, argued. 
________________________________ 
BURDICK, Justice 

I. NATURE OF THE CASE 

Excell Construction Inc. (Excell) appeals a ruling by the Idaho Industrial Commission 
finding Excell liable for unpaid unemployment insurance taxes. The Industrial Commission 
determined Excell had mischaracterized many employees engaged in covered employment as 
“independent contractors,” resulting in Excell’s alleged unemployment insurance underpayment. 
We reverse and remand to the Industrial Commission for further proceedings. 

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 

Excell is in the business of selling and installing sheetrock, also known as “drywall.” 
The company bids for sheetrocking and related work offered by primary contractors and 
homeowners, providing both the materials and the labor needed to complete a project. 
Excell maintains supplies of sheetrock and related items in a central storehouse, and uses 
company trucks and heavy equipment to haul these supplies to construction sites. On site,
“hangers” cut and install the sheetrock. When they are finished, other workers clear away the 
resulting debris. Next “tapers” arrive to tape the sheetrock slabs and apply “mud” to make the 
walls appear seamless. They are followed by workers who apply texture finishes and paint. 

Excell categorizes some of its workers as “employees,” and some as “independent 
contractors.” Those workers who transport the sheetrock to construction sites, as well as those 
who clean the site and those who apply paint and texture are designated by Excell as employees. 
In contrast, Excell permits hangers and tapers to elect whether they will be classified as 
employees or as independent contractors. For those hangers and tapers categorized as 
employees, Excell deducts taxes and social security from their wages. For those who are 
categorized as independent contractors, Excell makes no such deductions. Workers can elect to 
provide worker’s compensation coverage themselves, or Excell will pay for worker’s 
compensation coverage but adjust the worker’s rate of reimbursement accordingly. Most of the 
hangers and tapers that perform work for Excell are defined by the company as independent 
contractors. 

Excell bids on the projects its workers perform, and the workers have no part in the 
bidding process. After reporting in as available for work or being contacted by Excell, hangers 
and tapers are assigned to work projects. They are paid a flat rate based on the footage of 
drywall completed. 

Excell requires workers designated as independent contractors to sign documents Excell 
styles as “sub-contract agreement[s].” These open-ended documents are signed only by the 
workers and place responsibility on the workers to pay any appropriate taxes and to provide 
liability and worker’s compensation insurance on their own. Excell does not enter into written 
contracts with its hangers or tapers regarding the individual projects on which they work. 
The Industrial Commission found that Excell determines what materials are needed and 
provides these at the jobsite at its own expense. The hangers and tapers generally supply personal 
tools. Workers are permitted to charge tools on an Excell account and reimburse the company 
later. 

The Industrial Commission additionally found that hangers and tapers contact Excell 
when they have questions about a particular project. Hangers and tapers have the authority to 
hire others to assist in completing projects, but this is rarely done. Most of those Excell 
designates as independent contractors perform work only for Excell, although they are permitted
to seek work elsewhere. Either Excell or its workers may terminate the working relationship 
between them without incurring any liability beyond reimbursement for any labor already 
performed. 

In March 2001, the Idaho Department of Commerce and Labor (the Department) 
conducted a compliance audit of Excell covering the first quarter of 1999 through the first 
quarter of 2001. Following the audit, the Department issued a status determination concluding 
that the hangers and tapers represented by Excell as independent contractors had performed 
services in covered employment and therefore were reportable and taxable for unemployment 
insurance purposes. As Excell had not reported these workers, the company was assessed for 
unpaid unemployment insurance taxes and penalties in the amount of $10,671.77, later adjusted 
downward to $6,353.26. 

Excell appealed the status determination, and two days of hearings were conducted 
before a Department appeals examiner. After making detailed findings of fact, the appeals 
examiner upheld the Department’s status determination. Excell appealed to the Industrial 
Commission, requesting the Industrial Commission consider additional evidence not presented at 
the hearing before the appeals examiner. The Industrial Commission declined to consider further 
evidence, and after a de novo review of the record it affirmed the appeals examiner’s decision. 
Excell filed a timely appeal, which is presently before this Court. 

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW 

“On appeal from the Industrial Commission, this Court exercises free review of the 
Commission’s legal conclusions, but will not disturb findings of fact if they are supported by 
substantial and competent evidence.” Steen v. Denny’s Restaurant, 135 Idaho 234, 235, 16 P.3d 
910, 911 (2000). “Substantial and competent evidence is relevant evidence that a reasonable 
mind might accept to support a conclusion.” Uhl v. Ballard Medical Products, 138 Idaho 653, 
657, 67 P.3d 1265, 1269 (2003). The conclusions reached by the Industrial Commission 
regarding the credibility and weight of evidence will not be disturbed unless the conclusions are 
clearly erroneous. Hugen v. Highland Estates, 137 Idaho 349, 351, 48 P.3d 1238, 1240 (2002). 
We will not re-weigh the evidence or consider whether we would have drawn a different 
conclusion from the evidence presented. Id.

IV. ANALYSIS 

A. Excell’s motion to allow additional evidence. 

Excell argues the Industrial Commission abused its discretion in refusing to consider 
additional evidence not presented in the hearing conducted by the appeals examiner. The 
evidence at issue related to Shawn Stovall, who formerly installed drywall for Excell and who 
served as one of the Department’s witnesses at the hearing. Stovall testified he did not have an 
independent business when he worked for Excell, and that despite his ostensible status as an 
“independent contractor” he was fired from his position with the company. 

After his termination, Stovall applied with the Department for unemployment benefits. 
Because Excell had not reported Stovall’s work for the purposes of unemployment insurance, he 
had no qualifying wages on record with the Department. Stovall’s request for benefits came 
shortly after the Department issued its status determination finding that Excell’s drywall 
installers were engaged in covered employment for unemployment insurance purposes. Because 
the Department found Stovall was entitled to benefits, he was allowed to receive unemployment 
insurance payments. However, the Department warned Stovall that Excell was appealing the 
status determination to the Industrial Commission – if the decision regarding the status of Stovall 
and the other drywall installers were reversed, Stovall might be required to repay the benefits he 
had received. 

Some time after the first day of the hearings conducted by the appeals examiner, Excell 
obtained from the Department documents showing the Department agreed to pay unemployment 
benefits to Stovall. Contending that Stovall’s receipt of unemployment compensation 
undermined his credibility as a witness, Excell asked the Industrial Commission to consider the 
new evidence regarding Stovall’s credibility although it was not presented at the hearing below. 
In its “application for rehearing/reconsideration” submitted to the Industrial Commission, Excell 
described the new evidence, arguing it was relevant and significant. Excell did not, however, 
mention why it failed to raise the evidence previously. 

In reviewing a decision by an appeals examiner, the record before the Industrial 
Commission is the same as that considered by the appeals examiner, “unless it appears to the 
commission that the interests of justice require that the interested parties be permitted to present 
additional evidence.” I.C. § 72-1368(7). The Industrial Commission’s decision to permit or 
exclude evidence not raised before the examiner is discretionary. Id.; Teevan v. Office of the
Attorney General, 130 Idaho 79, 81, 936 P.2d 1321, 1323 (1997). A party before the Industrial 
Commission does not possess “the unbridled right to present a substantially new case, absent 
some showing as to why the evidence had been unavailable earlier.” Teevan, 130 Idaho at 81, 
936 P.2d at 1323 (quoting Rogers v. Trim House, 99 Idaho 746, 750, 588 P.2d 945, 949 (1979)). 

The Industrial Commission is empowered to “decide all claims for review filed by any 
interested party in accordance with its own rules of procedure not in conflict [with other law].” 
I.C. § 72-1368(7). The “Rules of Appellate Practice and Procedure under the Idaho Employment 
Security Law” adopted by the Industrial Commission require a party requesting a new hearing to 
submit with its request: 

1. the reason for requesting the hearing; 

2. whether the party desires to present evidence to the Industrial Commission in 
addition to that presented to the appeals examiner; 

3. a description of the evidence the party desires to present; 

4. an explanation of why the proposed evidence is relevant to the issues before the 
Industrial Commission; and 

5. reason why the proposed evidence was not presented before the examiner. 
R.A.P.P. 6(B). 

In the present case, Excell’s request for a rehearing and the admission of new evidence 
described the evidence at issue, why the appeal was being brought, and the alleged relevance and 
significance of the evidence. This met the first four requirements of R.A.P.P. 6(B) listed above. 
Excell neglected, however, to inform the Industrial Commission why the proposed evidence was 
not presented earlier, and therefore the fifth requirement of R.A.P.P. 6(B) was not satisfied. In 
its briefs to this Court, Excell for the first time claims the Department was slow to turn over the 
documents in question, and therefore Excell’s failure to refer to those documents in the hearing 
was excusable. This argument was never presented to the Industrial Commission. This Court 
will not consider arguments raised for the first time on appeal. Combs v. Kelly Logging, 115 
Idaho 695, 698, 769 P.2d 572, 575 (1989). 

Excell also contends the Industrial Commission mistakenly determined Excell had 
possession of the documents prior to the appeals examiner hearings. Even if the Industrial 
Commission’s determination was mistaken, however, the Commission’s discussion of when
Excell obtained copies of the documents was secondary to its primary finding regarding the 
requirements of R.A.P.P. 6(B). 

Because Excell did not explain in its motion to the Industrial Commission why the 
disputed evidence was unavailable at the hearing below, this Court finds the Commission’s 
refusal to conduct a new hearing or to consider new evidence was not an abuse of discretion. 

B. Employment Status 

Idaho’s Employment Security Law provides assistance for workers who face 
unemployment through no fault of their own. I.C. § 72-1302. Employers are obligated to pay 
unemployment insurance taxes based on the wages they pay to employees engaged in “covered 
employment.” King v. Dept. of Employment, 110 Idaho 312, 313, 715 P.2d 982, 983 (1986). 
These employer contributions finance a trust fund that supports the unemployment insurance 
system. Id. When interpreting social legislation such as the Employment Security Act, 
“exemptions from coverage are narrowly construed.” Id. 

After weighing the legally relevant factors, the Industrial Commission determined 
Excell’s hangers and tapers were “covered employees” for which the company was liable for 
unpaid unemployment insurance taxes and penalties. Excell disagrees, arguing the Industrial 
Commission misapplied the facts to the law. 

Once it is shown that a worker received remuneration from a putative employer for 
performing services, that worker will be found to have been engaged in covered employment, 
“subject to the putative employer showing that an exemption applies.” Beale v. Dept. of 
Employment, 131 Idaho 37, 41, 951 P.2d 1264, 1268 (1997). “[T]he term ‘covered employment’ 
is an ‘expansive term’ and ‘sweeps within its purview employees and independent contractor 
alike.’” Id. (quoting Software Assoc., Inc. v. Department of Employment, 110 Idaho 315, 316, 
715 P.2d 987, 986 (1986)). “[T]he status of independent contractor is not enough to avoid 
coverage.” King, 110 Idaho at 314, 715 P.2d at 984 (quoting Swayne v. Dept. of Employment, 93 
Idaho 101, 104, 456 P.2d 268, 271 (1969)). 

In order to merit an exemption from the presumption that services for remuneration are 
covered employment, the putative employer must demonstrate two things: 
(a) That the worker has been and will continue to be free from control or direction 
in the performance of his work, both under his contract of service and in fact; and 
(b) That the worker is engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, 
profession, or business.

I.C. § 72-1316(4) (emphasis added). Excell does not dispute that its hangers and tapers 
performed services in exchange for remuneration. The Industrial Commission’s determination of 
whether a worker was engaged in covered employment is a question of fact this Court will 
uphold provided the findings are supported by substantial and competent evidence. See Stoica v. 
Pocol, 136 Idaho 661, 663, 39 P.3d 601, 603 (2001) (stating that a worker’s status as an 
employee or independent contractor is a factual determination); Beale, 131 Idaho at 43-44, 951 
P.2d at 1270-71 (upholding findings of covered employment because they were supported by 
substantial and competent evidence). As a result, Excell must show the Industrial Commission 
lacked substantial and competent evidence on which to base its determination. 

1. Freedom From Control 

The first half of the test a putative employer must satisfy in order to qualify for an 
exemption from the presumption of covered employment regards the worker’s freedom from 
employer control. Idaho Code § 72-1316(4)(a) requires a showing “[t]hat the worker has been 
and will continue to be free from control or direction in the performance of his work, both under 
his contract of service and in fact . . . .” The appropriate test in making this determination 
considers whether the putative employer has control over the details of the work, the manner, 
method or mode of doing the work, and the means by which the work is to be accomplished, as 
contrasted with the results of the work. Beale, 131 Idaho at 42, 951 P.2d at 1269; IDAPA 
09.01.35.112.03. Additionally, the freedom from direction and control must exist in theory 
(under a contract of service) and in fact; and the putative employer must demonstrate that it 
lacked a right to control the worker. Beale, 131 Idaho at 42, 951 P.2d at 1269; IDAPA 
09.01.35.112.03. 

In making its determination, the Industrial Commission noted that Excell provided the 
materials with which the hangers and tapers worked, and transported these items to the jobsite. 
The Commission found that Excell dictated the “contracts” between itself and its workers 
regarding insurance, and Excell controlled the rate at which it compensates its hangers and 
tapers. Additionally, the Industrial Commission observed that Excell retained the ability to call a 
worker back to correct poorly completed work, and retained the right to discharge its 
“subcontractors” without cause. The Commission found that in one case Excell actually 
exercised this option, discharging Stovall.

In response, Excell argues that the control ascribed to it was limited to control over the 
results of the work, not the “manner, method or mode” by which it was accomplished. Unlike 
control over the manner, method or mode by which a task is performed, merely exerting control 
over the results of the work does not suggest an employment relationship. Beale, 131 Idaho at 
42, 951 P.2d at 1269. Indeed, the evidence attributed by the Industrial Commission as showing 
direction and control relate to Excell’s interest in the quality of the end product rather than the 
methods by which that outcome is achieved. Setting the rate of compensation is unrelated to 
control of the work process itself. Similarly, Excell’s practice of dictating who pays for 
insurance is part of the relationship between Excell and its workers, but sheds no light on which 
party controls how actual work is performed. Excell’s ability to require its workers to correct 
poorly completed work suggests only a concern with results, not methods. 

Excell’s practice of providing sheetrock and its ability to discharge workers present 
closer questions. Providing sheetrock could suggest that Excell desired to control the specific 
nature of the drywall to be installed. However, Excell plausibly argues that supplies were 
provided simply as a means of assuring the consistency of the materials, to thereby assure the 
quality of the results. The matter of who supplies materials may be relevant in examining the 
relationship between the company and workers, but not to this portion of the analysis concerning 
control or direction over how work was performed. 

Excell’s ability to discharge workers could be suggestive of a right to control the methods 
by which work is performed, at least in that it demonstrates Excell could exert power over its 
workers if it wished to do so. The record is unclear, however, whether the one instance in which 
Excell exercised this ability arose from a personality conflict or a disagreement regarding the 
work process. The Industrial Commission did not reach a finding on that point, noting only that 
“Shawn Stovall testified that he was fired from a job with [Excell] after he got into a dispute with 
one of [Excell’s] principals and would not apologize.” The ability of an employer to discharge a 
worker at will provides “little assistance in determining the relationship between the parties.” 
Livingston v. Ireland Bank, 128 Idaho 66, 70, 910 P.2d 738, 742 (1995). “[T]his is particularly 
true where the services rendered are a succession of individual tasks separately assigned when 
the need arises on an occasional basis.” Id. The ability of either party to be able to unilaterally 
terminate a business relationship is nevertheless a factor that may be considered with respect to 
whether the worker is engaged in and independently established trade, occupation, profession, or
business. Beale, 131 Idaho at 42, 951 P.2d at 1269. However, this Court has not considered it as 
a factor relevant to the question of whether a worker is free from direction or control in the 
performance of his work. See, e.g., id. (setting forth the factors to be considered when 
determining whether a worker is engaged in covered employment, and placing unilateral 
termination without liability as a factor only as to whether the worker is “engaged in an 
independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business”).1 

The legal conclusion that Excell controlled or directed how the hangers and tapers in 
question performed their work was not supported by the facts cited by the Industrial 
Commission. It is not a matter of the weight of evidence, but instead the Commission 
misapplied the facts to the law by relying on facts unrelated to the applicable legal test. 

2. Independently Established Trade, Occupation, Profession, Or Business 

The Industrial Commission, having arrived at the conclusion that the drywall installers 
were not free from Excell’s direction and control, only summarily addressed the independently 
established trade, occupation, profession, or business requirement of I.C. § 72-1316(4)(b). In 
oral argument and in its brief to this Court, the Department conceded that the Industrial 
Commission issued no findings of fact or conclusions of law regarding whether the drywall 
installers were independently established. Because the Industrial Commission misapplied the 
law regarding the “control” test in I.C. § 72-1316(4)(a) and the Department has conceded the 
Commission never reached the “independence” test in I.C. § 72-1316(4)(b), we remand this case 
back to the Industrial Commission. 

It should be further noted that employer liability for unpaid unemployment insurance 
taxes is assessed with reference to each individual worker. See I.C. § 72-1316. Consequently, 
when the legally relevant facts apply differently to some workers than to others, the Industrial 
Commission must reach individualized findings as to each worker, or to each similarly situated 
group of workers. See Anderson v. Larsen, 136 Idaho 402, 406, 34 P.3d 1085, 1089 (2001) 
(stating that legal conclusions must be supported by the facts found). Here, the Industrial 
Commission acknowledged three of the drywall installers testified they have independent 
businesses registered with the State, yet the Industrial Commission dismissed that factor “when 
balanced against the rest of the evidence.” Also, the Industrial Commission observed that only 
one of Excell’s workers hired others to work under him. Because this individual was a rare 
exception, the Commission determined Excell’s workers generally did not hire their own crews. 
The Commission did not state whether the different facts that applied to the one worker who 
hired his own crew merited a different result with regard to that worker. Where individual facts 
are different, individual findings for each worker or similarly situated group of workers is 
required. 

C. Attorney Fees 

Excell requests attorney’s fees on appeal pursuant to I.A.R. 41, I.A.R. 11.1, I.C. §§ 72- 
708 and 12-117. Idaho Appellate Rule 41 provides the procedure for requesting attorney fees on 
appeal, but is not authority alone for awarding fees. Shawver v. Huckleberry Estates, 140 Idaho 
354, 365, 93 P.3d 685, 696 (2004). Idaho Code § 72-708 provides that practice and procedure 
under the worker’s compensation law be simple and “as far as possible in accord with the rules 
of equity.” Like I.A.R. 41, I.C. § 72-708 does not itself provide authority for an award of 
attorney fees. 

To support its request for attorney fees, Excell argues I.A.R. 11.1 applies to the present 
case. This rule provides for sanctions when a brief or other document submitted by a party is not 
well grounded in fact, is not warranted by existing law or a good faith argument, and “is 
interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or cause unnecessary delay or needless 
increase in the cost of litigation.” I.A.R. 11.1; Rivas v. K.C. Logging, 134 Idaho 603, 609, 7 P.3d 
212, 218 (2000). Here, the Department’s position is not interposed for an improper purpose. 
The Court will also not award fees under I.C. § 12-117. 

V. CONCLUSION 

The Court having found the legal conclusion concerning I.C. § 72-1316(4)(a) is 
unsupported by the facts referenced by the Industrial Commission, and there are no findings of 
fact nor conclusions of law regarding I.C. § 72-1316(4)(b), this case is reversed and remanded to 
the Industrial Commission for further proceedings. Costs to the appellant. 

Chief Justice SCHROEDER, Justices TROUT, EISMANN and JONES, concur.