222 Mass. 434 | Mass. | 1916
There was ample evidence to warrant the findings of the Industrial Accident Board that the personal injuries
The workmen’s compensation act (St. 1911, c. 751, as amended by St. 1912, cc. 172, 571) provides in Part II, § 15, “No proceedings for compensation for an injury under this act shall be maintained unless a notice of the injury shall have been given to the association or subscriber as soon as practicable after the happening thereof, and unless the claim for compensation with respect to such injury shall have been made within six months after the occurrence of the same.” As the injury was sustained in December, 1914, and January, 1915, and a written claim for compensation was duly filed on March 25, 1915, in accordance with § 15, the claim as such, need not be further considered. The questions raised by the rulings requested by the insurer relate only to the notice of the injury.
By the provisions of the statute the notice of injury and the claim for compensation are two distinct requirements. The notice must be in writing, must state the time, place and cause of the injury, and must be served as provided in the act. See §§ 16 to 18 inclusive. The Industrial Accident Board, in passing upon the third ruling
It is provided in § 18, however, that “Want of notice shall not be a bar to proceedings under this act, if it be shown that the association, subscriber, or agent had knowledge of the injury.” The board has found that Bloom was injured on or about December 1, 1914, and on two other occasions.. According to his own testimony, while engaged in the work of cutting stone, a piece of stone hit him in the left eye about December 1, 1914, he got a piece of steel in the same eye about January 1, 1915, and about the middle of January received another injury. After December 1, his vision began to weaken, and later it failed so rapidly that about February 24, 1915, he was unable to continue at his work.
As to the employer’s knowledge of the injury, the board finds that the employee notified the foreman of the Webb Pink Granite Company, one Hedberg, of the occurrence of the injury of December 1, 1914. Hedberg testified that he also knew of other smaller blows that Bloom got in his eye, from time to time after the first of December, one being in the latter part of January. The board also finds that the employee advised the timekeeper, one Garland, of the occurrence of the injuries. And it was Garland who made out and signed the report of the injury, on the official form of the board, under date of March 8, 1915. The findings of the board settle the fact that the employer had knowledge of the injury, unless it be held that neither Hedberg nor Garland was an “agent” within the meaning of § 18. Diaz’s Case, 217 Mass. 36.
It is to be noted that a written notice of injury may be served upon “any officer or agent of a corporation if the subscriber is a corporation” (§ 17); and that knowledge of the injury by the “subscriber, or agent” (§ 18) will prevent want of notice from being a bar to recovery. Plainly it was not necessary to show that an officer of the corporation employer knew of Bloom’s injury. On the other hand it is not reasonable to construe “agent” in the broad sense of including every person who is authorized to act for the employer in its varied business dealings with third persons. The rule is well settled that a principal is affected with constructive knowledge, regardless of his actual knowledge, of all material facts of which his agent acquires knowledge while
Decree
The third ruling requested by the insurer was as follows: “The claim for compensation is not in fact a notice of injury required by the statute.”
Made in the Superior Court by Morton, J.