209 A.D. 627 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
The State Industrial Board has found that the claimant sustained injuries arising out of and in the course of his employment as a fire cleaner by the DeGrasse Paper Company, respondent, in that while hoeing out red hot coals from the rear of a furnace in the plant of his employer, a fellow-employee turned water on the hot coals thereby causing a large cloud of hot steam to arise from which claimant sustained injuries in the nature of burns on his hands and face and right eye, disabling claimant. The State Industrial Board, however, denied an award of compensation to the claimant on the ground that he failed to give written notice to the employer of the accidental injury and that the employer had no knowledge of the accident within thirty days thereafter.
The sole question is one of notice. The Workmen’s Compensation Law provides: “ Notice of an injury for which compensation is payable under this chapter shall be given to the Commission and to the employer within thirty days after the accident causing such injury * * *. The notice shall be in writing * * *. The failure to give notice of injury * * * unless excused by the Board either on the ground that notice for some sufficient reason could not have been given, or on the ground that the employer, or his or its agents in charge of the business in the place
The only other question under section 18 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, above quoted, is whether there has been any waiver of such written notice by failure to raise the objection before the Board on the hearing of the claim. This objection was, however, raised before the Board at the hearing by the insurance carrier. It is not necessary that this objection should be raised by both the employer and the insurance carrier. The statute is satisfied if the objection is “ raised before the Board.” (Matter of Cheesman, 236 N. Y. 47, 50.)
The decision of the State Industrial Board should be affirmed.
Decision of the State Industrial Board unanimously affirmed, without costs..