201 A.D. 173 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
Lead Opinion
The claimant has obtained an award for an injury to his arm which he sustained from a fall while walking in a public street. He was employed by a newspaper corporation as its mechanical superintendent. It was his duty to lay out all advertising matter
The award should be reversed and the claim dismissed.
All concur, Hinman, J., with an opinion, except Kilby, J., dissenting, with a memorandum.
Concurrence Opinion
In my judgment there should be a reversal. The accident did not arise out of claimant’s employment. The claimant admits that the primary reason for going home was to get his lunch. He
The employer’s general manager says: “ He might have taken it back to the office,— in that case he would have missed a meal and be forced to eat it down town instead of going home.” His employer knew that he took work home and that there were other employees who did the same thing. The general manager testified “ there are a number of employees who do work at home — all that we require is that the men do their work — if a man doesn’t do it we fire him.” Claimant says he was told he could use his own judgment and get the work done. There were times when claimant would collect advertising copy from the patrons of his newspaper on his way home to lunch but on the night in question he says: “ I collected it [the copy] at the office and took it home and prepared it.”
The question before us cannot be decided upon the basis of what he might have done on other occasions in the way of collecting copy from advertisers while out for lunch. The question is, what was he doing that night? Of course he had to get the work out for the night crew, but the accident did not arise out of his having to do that work. It arose out of his doing it that way and the method was adopted by himself to give him a more satisfactory meal at home. The method served him. His employment did not require it. He had no set hours. He simply had to get the work ready in time to get the edition out. The employer was satisfied with the method but did not dictate it expressly or impliedly. It was not a condition, or an obligation, or an incident of the employment in any direct or proximate way. It flowed directly from an act of his own, prompted by a desire to serve his own personal comfort or his own physical well-being. He preferred to lunch at home. If he had gone to lunch without the work in his possession there would be no question but that he was not covered. When he put the work in his pocket and went home for lunch to get a good meal, doing part of his work at home instead of getting a quick lunch nearer the plant and then returning to the office to complete his work, I fail to see how any different principle can be applied. His method of getting lunch simply extended his journey on the street and prolonged his absence from the office. He had to come back to the office in either event. It was not any more an
Dissenting Opinion
Notwithstanding the apparent holding in Matter of Clark v. Voorhees (231 N. Y. 14), which comes the closest to this case of any I can find, I think this award should be affirmed. It is clear that the Syracuse Herald Corporation is a union plant; if it was not the claimant could not work there. The hours are eight each day in the twenty-four. That plant has two heavy advertising days in each week. Claimant was superintendent, mechanical superintendent and foreman of the advertising department. He had to get ready and lay out, on the days in question, all of the work to keep the night shift busy. To facilitate this work and be able to get his dinner at home and comply with the rule of the union and do his work, he was permitted and it was understood between the general manager of the whole works and the claimant, that he could take some of his work home and get it ready for the night crew during this hour which it took him to go there. He had but one-half hour for lunch under the general contract of hiring. The general manager swore that a man had to do his work on time or he would get fired. Claimant swore he did it “ for the convenience of the office.” He further testified: “ I am responsible for the room and for the papers catching the trains, the employer is not, he holds me responsible, and I facilitate the work so we can catch and make these trains.” The general manager testified: “ He has no hours, merely a question of his work; his duties took him all through the building, and he very often takes home advertising to lay it out at home and bring it down to get the night crew started, so we can make our first edition in the morning.” “ Q. Is the nature of his work such that it makes it necessary for him to perform his duties in that way? A. Very often. Q. When he is at his home for any purpose and has particular work to perform, do you consider that he is in your employ at that time? A. I do. Q. And his work is of such a nature that it makes it necessary for him to do that work at home? A. Yes. Q. And you feel he was preparing that at his home that night? A. Before a heavy day he always does that, a day in which we carry a large amount of advertising.” The 3d day of February, 1921, was one of those heavy advertising days; he had taken this work home and
Award reversed and claim dismissed, with costs against the State Industrial Board.