241 P. 894 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
This is a proceeding brought for the purpose of reviewing an order made by the respondent Industrial Commission in connection with a claim for compensation made by the petitioner Beyerle against the respondent Benson Lumber Company on account of alleged injuries received by the petitioner while in the employ of said company.
On the hearing of petitioner's application before the Commission it was shown that the respondent Benson Lumber Company maintains a lumber-mill at the harbor of San Diego, California; that this mill is located upon land which faces the navigable waters of San Diego Bay; that extending into the navigable waters of the bay immediately in front of its property the said respondent company maintains a log boom for the purpose of impounding logs, which consists of an area of water inclosed by a chain of floating logs anchored to piling; that during each summer season the respondent company assembles large rafts of logs on the Columbia River in Oregon; that these rafts, each of which is approximately 960 feet long and is bound together by heavy chains, are towed by tugs from the Columbia River to the harbor at San Diego, where they are anchored in the navigable waters of San Diego Bay, adjacent to but outside *21 of said log boom; that the first raft of the season is anchored by shoving one end upon the mud-flats along the beach, with the other end extending out into deep water, and the succeeding rafts are moored outside of the first raft and anchored to dolphins by means of chains; that these rafts are then broken up and the logs are either placed within the said boom area or are towed to the respondent company's wharf and then lifted from the water to cars for shipment by rail; that the work of breaking up the rafts and handling the logs is performed by means of a floating derrick scow and a gasoline power boat, both of which are operated by the respondent employer; that the derrick scow is about thirty feet wide and sixty feet long, upon which is mounted a large derrick or crane; that this derrick scow is towed around from place to place on the waters of the bay by a boat which is propelled by gasoline motor; that the aforesaid operations were all performed upon navigable waters by a special crew employed by respondent employer, and of which petitioner is a member; that the petitioner's duties consisted of operating the engine of the motor-boat while towing the raft, logs, and derrick barge, and in working upon the derrick scow and log rafts, assisting in the handling and breaking up of the latter; that while thus employed petitioner, on three separate occasions, sustained injuries to his right hip and leg, and on account of which injuries a claim for compensation was filed with respondent Commission; that the first of the injuries referred to occurred on May 10, 1924, when, as a result of a strong wind, rough water, and a slack tow-line, the aforesaid motor-boat, which petitioner was operating at the time and which was engaged in towing the scow outside the boom in deep water, struck a piling, causing the motor-boat to rock and petitioner to receive a severe blow on his hip; that the second injury occurred on May 15, 1924, while petitioner was at work on one of said floating log rafts from which logs were being removed by means of the derrick on the scow lying alongside a raft, when he was struck below the right knee by the grab-hooks of the derrick as he was attempting to catch these hooks in order to guide them and fasten them to one of the logs; that the third injury occurred on May 24, 1924, while petitioner was again at work on the same raft and while he was standing on the raft, anchoring the scow in *22 the proper place alongside the raft in order to remove logs therefrom, at which time he slipped down between two logs on the raft and again struck his right hip.
Following the hearing on petitioner's said application an order was made by the Commission dismissing the said proceeding on the ground that the Commission was without jurisdiction therein, for the reason that at the time petitioner sustained the injuries of which he complained he was working on navigable waters and was engaged in maritime employment.
For the purpose of testing the question of jurisdiction in the Industrial Accident Commission to determine the rights of the respective parties to the proceeding, the matter is brought to this court.
The case principally relied upon by the petitioner herein is that of Grant Smith-Porter Ship Co. v. Rohde,
In the case of State Industrial Com. v. NordenholtCorporation,
While, in addition to the foregoing cases, a long list of authorities has been submitted in support of the several contentions of the parties to the controversy, for the reason that in similar proceedings recently had before the supreme court of this state, like questions on analogous facts, with identical authorities, were fully considered, it becomes necessary to determine herein only the applicability in *23 principle of the cases heretofore decided by the supreme court of California to the facts of the instant case, and therefrom to deduce a conclusion as to the questions submitted in this proceeding.
The first case is that of Alaska Packers' Assn. v.Industrial Acc. Com.,
The next case to which attention is directed is that entitledZurich General Acc. etc. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
In the case of James Rolph Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
In Grant Smith-Porter Co. v. Rohde,
If the question of "contract" as between the petitioner and the lumber company may be said to enter into the correct determination of the controversy, it is clear that the contract included a matter of a maritime nature, and hence that admiralty jurisdiction would prevail. On the other hand, if for the sole purpose of determining jurisdiction, the relationship of the employer and the employee be left out of consideration, the injuries sustained by the petitioner might then assume an aspect comparable with a tort committed in navigable waters, and from such a standpoint the jurisdiction would be in admiralty. *25
It follows that the order of the Industrial Accident Commission should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Conrey, P.J., and Curtis, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on November 30, 1925.