219 Mass. 244 | Mass. | 1914
Cheevers contended that he was an employee of one Pierce and that he was entitled to compensation for an injury suffered by him while in that employ.
The facts found by the committee of arbitration were in substance as follows:
Cheevers conducted a teaming business in the city of Pitts-field, "having three or four separate horses and teams.” He employed several men to work with these horses and teams beside working with them himself. He did work for various persons in Pittsfield and that vicinity.
As we construe the record, the accident happened on February 25, 1913, though in one place in the record it is stated «that it happened on February 28, 1913. On this day Cheevers fell from his cart while delivering coal. One of Cheevers’s men tried to do the work for Pierce on the following day in Cheevers’s place, but was not able to do it to Pierce’s satisfaction; and Cheevers’s horse and team and man were not employed further. The last period Cheevers worked for Pierce (that is to say the period here in question) was on February 7, 8, 10, 11,12,13,15 and 25. The last period before that was on February 1, 2, 5, 6 and 7, 1912. In addition, the arbitration committee made this further finding, to wit: “Cheevers worked the same as any other of Pierce’s regular men, under his orders, loading, driving, and putting in coal.” The committee decided “that in doing this work, Cheevers was so under the direction and control of Pierce, that the relation between them was that of master and servant,” and made an award in his favor.
The Industrial Accident Board, on review of this decision of the committee of arbitration, made the following decision: “The
Cheevers has contended that by reason of the special finding made by the committee, this case is taken out of the ordinary rule (applied in Hussey v. Franey and Driscoll v. Towle, ubi supra), and is brought within the decision in Linnehan v. Rollins, 137 Mass. 123. We do not find it necessary to come to a decision upon that contention because we are of opinion that on the facts found by the committee Cheevers’s employment was casual.
The meaning of this clause was considered at length in Gaynor’s Case, 217 Mass. 86. In addition to what was said there it may be of importance (in determining whether in a particular case the “employment is but casual”) to have in mind the apparent reason for this limitation upon the class of persons who are entitled to the benefits of the workmen’s compensation act. The scheme created by the workmen’s compensation act is a scheme of insurance in which the premiums to be paid by the employer are based upon the wages paid by him to his employees. It may have been thought impracticable to work out a scheme of insurance if persons who are only occasionally employed are to be included among those insured. This limitation was repealed by St. 1914, c. 708, § 13.'
Both on the reasoning in Gaynor’s Case and having in mind the reason for this limitation, we are of opinion that Cheevers’s employment was but casual. In Howard’s Case, 218 Mass.
The entry must be
Decree affirmed.