107 A. 611 | Conn. | 1919
The defendant contends that the Compensation Commissioner erred in finding that "there is a clear preponderance of scientific authority to the effect that there is greater danger under a tree or in the open than when protected in a house. This is shown both by statistics and by authoritative scientific dicta."
The question presented by this assignment is one of fact. In passing upon this proposition it is of importance to notice some of the principles which direct the course of the proceedings before a Compensation Commissioner. This court has said: "He may hear the applicant at his residence. He proceeds to hearing without pleadings and without regard to the ordinary rules of evidence. He may make his inquiry through oral testimony or written and printed records best calculated to ascertain the substantial rights of the parties."
An "appeal" to the Superior Court from the finding and award of the Commissioner is an original application invoking the exercise of the judicial power of the Superior Court in order to determine whether the findings and award of the Commissioner are so unreasonable as to justify judicial interference, and whether they are within the limits of the powers vested in him; if they meet this test, the decision reached by the Commissioner must stand, otherwise his award may be set aside by the Superior Court. Powers v. Hotel Bond Co.,
To take judicial notice and to apply it to the decision of a case, is a right which appertains to every court of justice, from the lowest to the highest, and may be exercised *10
by this court. Arthur v. Norfield CongregationalChurch,
Judicial notice, in its appropriate field, displaces evidence, since, as it stands for proof, it fulfils the object which evidence is designed to fulfil, and makes evidence unnecessary. Brown v. Piper,
We do not decide that there is greater danger under a tall tree in a thundershower than in other places, but we have no hesitation in holding that the Commissioner did not find this decisive fact without substantial evidence. Thus, in Appleton's American Cyclopaedia (Vol. 10, p. 463) it is stated that "dangerous is it, therefore, to take shelter under a tree during a thunder gust." In the latest edition of The Americana (Vol. 17, p. 434) under the title "Lightning and Lightning Rods," the writer says that "fatalities are everywhere increased by the tendency to seek shelter from the rain when caught out in a storm, and these isolated shelters, as *11 trees, barns, monument buildings in public parks, etc., are among the most liable to be struck." In the Encyclopaedia Britannica (Vol. 2, 11th Ed., p. 869, ¶ 35) under the title "Atmospheric Electricity," the writer says: "The fact that a considerable number of people sheltering under trees are killed by lightning is generally accepted as convincing proof of the unwisdom of the proceeding. When there is an option between a tree and an adjacent house, the latter is doubtless the safer choice." See, also, Paul Burt's "First Steps in Scientific Knowledge," p. 52. In Harper's Magazine (Vol. 41, p. 33) a tall tree is portrayed with electricity flowing from the highest point of the tree to the ground. This illustration is designated "The Natural Lightning-Rod." This illustration appears in an article entitled "The Mysteries of a Thunder Shower," which was written by Jacob Abbott, a famous juvenile writer and educator.
To repeat: The Compensation Commissioner has found that "there is a clear preponderance of scientific authority to the effect that there is greater danger under a tree or in the open than when protected in a house." This finding should stand, as it is not contrary to reason and is consistent with the evidence.
The remaining reasons of appeal present the claim that as a matter of law under no circumstances can death by lightning constitute a personal injury for which an allowance can be made under our Compensation Act.
If the place under the tree were the more dangerous, the fact that the deceased chose it as the place of refuge from the storm and that he was injured at this place, does not prevent recovery. The act of seeking and obtaining shelter arose out of, that is, was within the scope or sphere of his employment, and was a necessary adjunct and an incident to his engaging in and continuing *12
such employment. Obtaining shelter from a violent storm in order that he might be able to resume work when the storm was over, was not only necessary to the preservation of the deceased's health and perhaps his life, but was incident to the deceased's work, and was an act promoting the business of the master. L.R.A. 1916A, 348. See, also, Richards v. Indianapolis AbattoirCo.,
In Griffith v. Cole Bros.,
"An injury which is the natural and necessary incident of one's employment is proximately caused by such employment; as it is, also, when the employment carries with it a greater exposure to the injury sustained than the exposure to which persons generally in that locality are subjected." Our latest case sustaining this proposition is Ahern v. Spier,
The Superior Court is advised to affirm the award of the Compensation Commissioner.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.