119 N.E. 878 | NY | 1918
This is a claim for death benefits under the Workmen's Compensation Law.
The employer, the Heine Safety Boiler Company, is a Missouri corporation. It has factories in Missouri and Pennsylvania. Warren H. Smith, the decedent, entered its service in 1900 under a contract of employment which was made in New York city. Mr. Smith was a traveling engineer. He was sent all over the United States, and took his orders from the employer's superintendent of construction. At first, the employer maintained engineering and construction offices in New York. In 1904, the construction office was moved to Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. After that, Mr. Smith reported there and received his orders there. Some years before the accident, the engineering office was moved to the same place. All that was left in New York was a selling agency. On December 10, 1916, Mr. Smith was sent from Pennsylvania *11 to Biddeford, Maine, to install a boiler, and while working there was killed. The question is whether the New York statute applies to such a case.
No hazardous business was transacted by the employer in New York when this accident occurred in Maine. The factory, the construction department, and the engineering department were in Missouri and Pennsylvania. The argument is that liability attaches under our statute because the contract of employment was made in our state. But that is not enough. At the date of that contract (1900) there was no Workmen's Compensation Act in New York. Long before any such act became a law, the employer moved its business away. In 1916 it was subject to no duty to insure its employees under our law, except, indeed, such employees as it might send within our state. The Workmen's Compensation Act involves an exercise of the police power (Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington,
Nothing to the contrary was held in Matter of Post v. Burger Gohlke (
A different problem is before us here. The duty to insure, when read into the contract, is as broad as the statute, but no broader. It comes into being only when the statute intends that it shall arise, and comes to a close when the statute intends that it shall end. This contract of employment, when made, was not subject to the act, because the act had not been passed. It did not become subject to the act afterwards, because the plant had then been moved, and there was no employment to be regulated. That the employment had its origin in this state is not decisive (Matter of Gardner v. Horseheads Const. Co.,
The order should be reversed and the claim dismissed, with costs against the state industrial commission in the Appellate Division and in this court.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CHASE, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, HOGAN and McLAUGHLIN, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *13