288 Mass. 448 | Mass. | 1934
The undisputed facts are these: The employer, engaged in the business of selling live crabs and crab meat, secured its crabs by means of traps sunk in the water in and around Boston Harbor. In winter traps were set as far as a mile or a mile and a half beyond Boston Light. Attached to the traps as sunk in the water inside the harbor were cables of ten or twelve fathoms, and outside the harbor cables of twenty to twenty-two fathoms. The contents of the traps were collected by the employer by the use of its own boats. The same crew went inside and outside the harbor for this purpose. It was customary and necessary for two employees to go on each trip to collect crabs. The boat so used at the time of the accident to the employee was thirty-seven feet long, nine and one half feet beam,
The Industrial Accident Board found that, while the injury and death of the employee occurred on navigable waters, the work which he was doing had no relation to commerce or navigation but was a matter of mere local concern, and awarded compensation to the claimant. In the Superior Court a decree was entered dismissing the claim for compensation. The claimant appealed.
The only point to be decided is whether the rights of the parties are governed by the workmen’s compensation act of this Commonwealth, or whether the case is outside its scope because within admiralty jurisdiction.
' The accident to the employee occurred in navigable waters in the course of a short voyage in Boston Harbor for the purpose of gathering from the salt water crabs to be sold in the ordinary course of trade. In substance it was a voyage
Decree affirmed.