201 A.D. 759 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
The record discloses that the employer (a corporation) of the claimant was engaged in business at 441 Pearl street, New York city, N. Y., as general printers; that claimant was an outside man,
Judge Cardozo, in the Court of Appeals, says: “ An award under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, in favor of his widow, was reversed at the Appellate Division on the ground that death, though occurring ‘ in the course of employment,’ did not arise ‘ out of ’ employment within the meaning of the statute. We reach a different conclusion. Heidemann’s duties involved exposure to something more than the ordinary perils of the street with its collisions, its pitfalls, and the like.” (Citing cases.) The learned judge further says: “ He was brought by the conditions of his work ‘ within the zone of special danger.’ ” (Citing Matter of Leonbruno v. Champlain Silk Mills, 229 N. Y. 470.) In Matter of Kowalek v. N. Y. Consol. R. R. Co. (229 N. Y. 489) it is held, in effect, that the Workmen’s Compensation Law is not applicable to an injury arising through a hazard not associated with, nor inherent in, the nature of the employment as its source and to which the employee would have been equally exposed if he had not been so employed. In the . case at bar it should be recalled that claimant was in this place, zone of danger, because of his employment and while actually engaged in his employment. Allcock v. Rogers (11 B. W. C. C. 149), an English case, where a boy was killed, while polishing the handles of a front door, by a bomb dropped from an attacking airplane in the late World War. The principle laid down in that case is such that it ought to control here, if we have not in this country escaped from or loosened the grip of the restrictions therein announced. It seems to me we have done so. (Matter of Katz v. Kadans & Co., 232 N. Y. 420.) The award in the last cited case was unanimously affirmed by this
The award should be affirmed, with costs to the State Industrial Board.
All concur, except H. T. Kellogg, J., dissenting.
Award affirmed, with costs in favor of the State Industrial Board.