140 A. 637 | Conn. | 1928
The commissioner awarded compensation to the claimant as the dependent of Angelo DeCarli, who died as the result of an injury received while working for the respondents. It was agreed before the commissioner that the injury arose out of and in the course of the decedent's employment, but the respondents claimed that compensation could not be awarded because the decedent fell within the exception from the Compensation Act of any employee "whose employment is of a casual nature, and who is employed otherwise than for the purposes of the employer's trade or business"; General Statutes, § 5388 as amended by Public Acts of 1921, Chap. 306, § 11; and also that the decedent was an independent contractor. These claims the commissioner overruled and from his award to the claimant the respondents appealed to the Superior Court; but they did not there claim that the decedent was an independent contractor. The trial court corrected the finding of the commissioner *361 by inserting a finding that the employment of the decedent was otherwise than for the purposes of the respondents' trade or business, but it ruled that that employment was not of a casual nature and dismissed the appeal. Both parties have appealed to this court, the respondents assigning as error the ruling of the trial court that the employment was not of a casual nature, and the claimant assigning as error the correction of the commissioner's finding made by the trial court.
The facts found by the commissioner are as follows: The respondent employers, partners, prior to March, 1927, had had constructed a large building, part of which they rented to a coal company and the rest of which they used to furnish warehouse facilities to the public for the storage of tobacco and other articles. After the building had been completed by the general contractor and had been turned over to the respondents, it was discovered that it lacked the very necessary equipment of a loading platform. The decedent, a carpenter, was thereupon engaged by the respondents to build such a platform at an agreed wage of $1 per hour; when that was finished he was to build various shelves and bins on the property of the company which had not been included in the general contract; and he was promised a few weeks' work at the warehouse; but when the work on the platform, shelves and bins was finished his employment was to cease. The decedent started upon the work, and, being a skilled workman, the respondents did not particularly direct him as to it, although they had at all times the right to control his performance of it. Very soon after he began to work, he fell from a roof he was constructing to the ground, suffering the injuries from which he died. Another carpenter was then secured to go on with the work and under the direction *362 of the respondents he worked at the warehouse for several weeks.
In Thompson v. Twiss,
While, as suggested in Thompson v. Twiss, under our Act the important consideration is the nature of the employment rather than the tenure of service, it is there clearly pointed out that stability of employment is one of the great elements to be considered in determining its nature. One of the meanings of "casual" is incidental; one of the ideas it imparts is that of impermanence. The Oxford Dictionary defines a casual laborer as "one who does casual or occasional jobs, but has no fixed employment." Elliott, in his Workmen's Compensation Acts (9th Ed.) p. 138, says: "If the workman is engaged by the week or any longer period, the employment would seem to be not casual." FitzGibbon, L.J., in M'Carthy v. Norcott, 43 Ir. L. T. 17, 2 B.W.C.C. 279, says: "The meaning of `casual employment' is best arrived at by considering its opposites. The words `regular,' `periodical,' and `permanent' would all be within the Act." It is interesting to note that in California the Industrial Accident Commission laid down the rule that an employment for a longer period than one week would not be held to be casual, and, while the Supreme Court of the State denied the power of the board to adopt any such arbitrary standard, by legislative Act it was finally provided that an employment should be deemed casual only when the work was to be completed in not more than ten days and would cost less than $100. 1 Honnold on Workmen's Compensation, 206; Maryland Casualty Co. v. Pillsbury,
The scope of our Workmen's Compensation law from the beginning has been more inclusive than that of many of the laws of other States, and the scope of the particular exception before us has by its express wording been narrower. Thompson v. Twiss was decided when the Act had been in operation less than two and one half years and since then there have been many decisions in other jurisdictions construing similar provisions to the one we are considering, but while some of them indicate a different viewpoint than that we adopted, it is not difficult to find supporting authority; see Stoker v. Wortham, 12 B.W.C.C. 34;Williams v. Haigh, 18 B.W.C.C. 549; Armstrong v.Industrial Acc. Com.,
In the instant case we have a definite hiring of the *365 decedent to perform certain work of which a large portion, at least, was essential to the conduct of the respondents' business, which in the contemplation of the parties was expected to take a few weeks, and which did in fact take several weeks to perform. Such an employment cannot be deemed one of a casual nature. The trial court was right in sustaining the commissioner's ruling in this regard.
Inasmuch as the exception to the Compensation Act we are considering includes only employees whose employment is both casual and otherwise than for the purposes of the employer's trade or business, this conclusion is decisive of the case. Pallanck v. Donovan,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.