193 A. 819 | N.J. | 1937
This is a workmen's compensation case, submitted on briefs without oral argument. The bureau awarded compensation, the amount of which is not now questioned; on the employer's appeal, the Court of Common Pleas affirmed; and the matter comes before us under this writ for a review on the law and the facts.
As to the law: the petitioner was employed as a policeman, and was on police duty at the time of the alleged accident. *481 He is therefore within the purview of section 1 of chapter 145 of the laws of 1913 (Pamph. L., p. 230) as amended in 1927 (Pamph. L., p. 239) and further amended in 1931 (Pamph. L.,p. 873). The important feature for present purposes, of the amendment of 1931 is the addition of a clause reading "who may hereafter be injured in the line of duty." The question is suggested, that the clause is intended to bar cases not occurring "in line of duty." The phrase is borrowed from pension legislation. Whether it means anything different from an accident arising out of and in the course of employment, need not be presently considered, as both parties frankly deal with the dispute as one to be settled in view of the Compensation act. The "accident" was this, as claimed: Petitioner, on patrol duty in the small hours of a windy gusty morning, felt the wind "blow something into his eye." The chain of events thereafter was, a futile attempt to get the "something" out, a visit to his doctor, who likewise tried to get it out, perhaps with only partial success; inflammation, hospitalization, operation, and in the end a sightless eye claimed to have resulted from an orbital abscess following infected conjunctivitis.
Granting the lodgment of foreign matter in the eye, and as to this there can be little or no dispute, we have the question whether this was an accident arising out of and in the course of the employment. That it was an accident, seems indubitable. That it arose in the course of the employment is equally clear. The real question, as usual, is whether it arose out of the employment. There is a well known contrariety of decision in cases of this class, some jurisdictions, particularly England, construing their statutes, with strictness, others, including New Jersey, inclining to a liberal view of injuries due to weather conditions where it fairly appears that the petitioner underwent an exposure to which the public generally was not subjected. The sunstroke case of George v. Waldron, Inc.,
We conclude that neither in law nor fact did the bureau or the Pleas err in holding that petitioner was injured by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment, and that the judgment of the Pleas under review should therefore be affirmed.