60 Ga. App. 410 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
This case was brought to this court by a bill of exceptions to an order of the superior court reversing an award of the Industrial Board, which award held that the accident upon which claim in the instant case is based did not arise out of and in the course of the employee’s employment. The evidence is conclusive that the duties of the husband of the claimant, as superintendent of the ice plant, were not clearly defined, and that the deceased could have reasonably thought it was his duty as a superintendent to do the thing in the course of which the accident occurred. 71 C. J. 667 (38); 1 Schneider’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, 743. It does appear, however, that the deceased was the superintendent, and “it was his duty to supervise the plant;” that he outranked any other local man, and that his authority was' the highest of any of the local employees; that Mr. Hancock was the president of the ice company and lived in Rome, and that the
So here we have the superintendent or manager of the defendant’s ice plant in Carrollton conceiving the idea that flood lights, similar to those used by filling-stations, would illuminate the plant, the ice-loading platform, and the sign on the front of the plant, thereby serving a fourfold purpose: to enhance its attractiveness, to increase its efficiency, to lessen the risk of theft, and to serve as an advertisement by illuminating at night the existing advertising sign which otherwise was not illuminated. He consulted a lighting engineer of the Georgia Power Company who approved the idea and told him what equipment would be necessary in general and where such a light should be placed to best accomplish the purposes the deceased had in mind.. The superintendent (deceased) then decided to save the company expense by erecting a pole himself upon which a flood light could later be placed. For an inexpensive pole, an old abandoned iron pipe from the company’s scrap heap was selected. He was in the act of assisting his
We recognize the rule that “if a workman, when there is no emergency, should of his own volition see fit to intermeddle with something entirely outside the work for which he is employed, he ought not to be allowed compensation upon the mere plea that he thought his act would be for the benefit of his employer. That plea may be of value under some circumstances, but it can not authorize an employee to voluntarily take upon himself the performance of work for which he was not employed” (1 Schneider’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, 967, § 292), and yet “the words ‘arising out of and in the course of the employment’ appear to me to be sufficient to include something which occurs while the workman is in his master’s employment and on his master’s work, although he is doing something in the interest of his master beyond the scope of what he was emploj'ed to do. The act does not say ‘when doing the work he was employed to. perform,’ and it is a fair inference that if it had been intended to limit the right to compensation to such accidents different language would have been used from that which occurs in the act. It must be assumed, therefore, that the legislature used language of wider scope to include cases where a workman intervenes to do something useful or helpful to his master, although outside the special duties which he is employed to perform.” 1 Schneider’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, 971, § 292. “If a workman whose duties are not clearly defined reasonably considered it to be his duty to perform the act he was doing when injured, the injury may be said to have arisen in the course of the employment.” 71 C. J. 666, 667, § 406.
In the instant case, if the attempt to put up the electric-light pole was reasonably within the scope of the deceased’s (superintendent’s) employment, the fact that from ignorance or error in
If the testimony in the instant case had shown that if the deceased had erected a wooden pole for the same purpose and under the same circumstances as here, which, if it (the wooden pole) had come in contact with the wires, would not have caused injury, would the faet that the deceased used an iron pole, instead of a nonconductor of electricity, prevent his wife from recovering compensation under the act? We think not. The mere fact that he used a metal pole merely goes to the question of negligence which is not material in a workman’s compensation case.
While it may be said that the digging of a hole and the placing of a pole therein were not among the technical duties of the deceased superintendent, yet it seems to us that a general superintendent in charge of a local ice plant would necessarily be required to perform various and sundry duties in and around the plant other than mere office work. Even though no special permission had been obtained by the deceased from the non-resident superior officers of the company to make the particular improvements, nevertheless, it does not seem to us to have been inconsistent with the duties of the local superintendent for him to have undertaken to assist in improving the yard of the company, which would provide better facilities for handling the company’s business at the plant. It is true that the president of the company, who lived in another town, testified that it was not the duty - of the manager to install such a flood light, and that the manager in the course of his duty should have consulted a non-resident engineer and him, the non-resident president, before he attempted to locate any flood light on any part thereof; however, Mr. Hauser, the non-resident chief engineer, testified that he saw nothing improper in the local superintendent
Affirmed.