176 A.D. 131 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
The Commission found as conclusions of fact that:
“1. On March 6, 1916, the day when S. W. Bowne received his injuries, he * * * was employed as the president of S. W. Bowne Company, a corporation engaged in the business of jobbers of hay, straw, grain and feed, and in the business of manufacturing corn and oat products into foods.
‘ ‘ 2. On said date while S. W. Bowne was working for his employer at his employer’s plant at 595-611 Smith street, borough of Brooklyn, city of New York, and while he was engaged in assisting some of the other employees in .taking boards through a window, his left foot was caught in a screw conveyor by reason of slipping through a loose board in the floor. The conveyor ran under the floor. The leg was badly crushed and was later amputated above the knee. A new machine for mixing poultry grain had been installed in the plant and some lumber was being delivered to he used in making spouts, and it was while assisting to unload this lumber that the above-mentioned accident happened.
'. “3. S. W. Bowne Company was a domestic corporation.
In the employee’s claim for compensation appear these questions and answers: “ State occupation when injured: Unloading lumber. How long have you worked at this occupation ? At intervals, thirteen years.” It thus appears from the findings of the Commission and elsewhere in the record that the claimant, although president of this small corporation, was, by the nature of his duties, engaged in all the various activities of the plant, looking after and superintending the work of the concern, and, from time to time, “at intervals,” as he expresses it, assisting in the actual, manual labor of the establishment.
Under these circumstances was he an employee 1 This court has already taken a position upon this question. (Beckmann v. Oelerich & Son, 174 App. Div. 353.) In that case Mr. Justice Lyon, writing the unanimous opinion of the court, said: “As to the claim that the claimant was not an employee within the meaning of the act. The claimant spoke of his compensation for. services as salary. He was the owner of 7 of the 100 shares of stock of the corporation. There is no claim that the payments, received by him were dividends upon his stock. The Commission found that the weekly payment made him was his weekly wage. Its finding was fully justified by the evidence. While he was vice-president of the corporation his employment was doubtless through the board of directors, of whom he may or may not have been one. Although he was the general foreman, he worked in the various industries of the corporation the same as other workmen,! and was doing the work of an ordinary employee at the time! he was injured. His being vice-president and a stockholder in no way affected his status as an employee. (Connor Workmen’s Compensation Law, 31, 96; Aken v. Barnet & Aufsesser Knitting Co., 118 App. Div. 463; affd., 192 N. Y. 554.)”
The facts in the case before us are so similar to those in the
We have examined the other questions raised by the appeal, but discover no error, and find nothing calling for further comment.
The award should be affirmed.
Award unanimously affirmed.