76 Ind. App. 551 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1921
This is an appeal from an award of the Industrial Board on account of accidental injuries sustained by appellee while in appellant’s employ. The errors assigned are: 1. The award is contrary to law. 2. The facts found by the board are insufficient to sustain the award. 3. The facts found are not sustained by sufficient evidence.
Appellant contends there is no evidence tending to show appellee’s injury was one “arising out of” or "in the course of” the employment.
It was admitted that on December 7, 1920, appellee was in the .employ of appellant at a weekly wage in excess of $24; that on said date he received a personal injury, as a result of which he had ever since that time been totally disabled and unable to work; that appellant had knowledge of such injury two days later, and that the only question was whether or not the accident arose out of the employment.
The record presents a peculiar situation. Appellee was. not present at the hearing and did not testify as a witness before the single member of the board or at the hearing before the full board. He was not represented on either hearing by a lawyer. His wife was present but took no part in the examination of the witnesses and although sworn as a witness she was unable to testify to any fact which tended to show how appellee came to be injured other than that he was injured while at work. She started to tell what her husband in his “last declaration” told her about his injury but was prevented doing so on the ground that all she knew was hearsay. The doctor when asked concerning appellee’s condition replied, “not always rational.” Whether appellee was rational and able to testify at the time of the hearing is not directly and positively disclosed by the evidence.
In view of the stipulation “that the only question is whether or not the accident arose out of the employment,” there is no merit in appellant’s contention that the evidence fails to show that the injury occurred in the course of the employment.
Where an insurance agent was injured as a result of slipping on an icy sidewalk while going from his train to the hotel in a town to which his employer had sent him to transact business for the company, it was held that the injury arose out of the employment. In re Harrraden (1917), 66 Ind. App. 298, 118 N. E. 142, the court said: “Where the employment of the injured person requires him to be at the place where his injury is, received, and he is in fact at such place in pursuance of the discharge of the duties of his employment, the risk thereby encountered is held to be incident to such employment, though the injury may have resulted from conditions produced by the weather to which persons generally in that locality were exposed. Where the duties of the employe require him to travel and visit different places in order that he may discharge the duties of his employment, his place of work is thereby enlarged or extended to include all the places to which such employe necessarily goes in discharging the duties of his employment. While the conditions produced by the weather may in a sense affect all alike in the particular vicinity, yet the fact remains that a person so employed is much more exposed to such hazards than the public generally because of the duties enjoined upon him by his employ
On page 306, of the same opinion, it is said: “If the nature of the employment, or the conditions under which it was pursued, or the exposure to injury it entails, or the doing of something incidental to the employment, was a proximate cause of the injury, it arises out of the employment. An injury of this description is one of the risks of the employment; for it is due to it and arises from it, either directly or as incident to it, or to the conditions and exposure surrounding it. And the proximate cause of the injury is not necessarily that which immediately arises out of the employment, but may be that which is reasonably incidental to it.”
In Refuge Assurance Co., Ltd. v. Millar (1911), 49 Scottish L. R. 67, 5 B. W. C. C. 522, an insurance agent employed to collect premiums from door to door, slipped on some stairs while on his rounds and injured himself. It was held that the accident arose out of the employment. In the course of the opinion, it is said: “If this man was on this stair simply and solely for the purpose of his business, namely, to go to the person whom he was calling upon, this accident fairly arose out of his employment as well as in the course of it.”
As said by this court, In re Bollman (1920), 73 Ind. App. 46, 126 N. E. 639, “The question in each case must
Appellee was known to Wood and Mason as a collector for insurance companies and likely to have considerable money in his possession. Within a few minutes before he was injured, appellee in the presence of Wood and Mason collected some money from the man with whom Wood was living. Wood and Mason left the house just before appellee did. Appellee started to leave the house and in so doing met Wood at the open door, and there asked Wood what he had for him. It is clear he was inquiring of Wood about the payment of the premium on an insurance policy carried by Wood and issued by appellant. Appellee and Wood became engaged in a conversation relative to a claim, Wood had against appellant'. At this point the door was closed. Appellee, Wood and Mason were outside and alone. No one saw or heard what took place between them. From three to five minutes later appellee came back into the house. His skull was fractured and his brain lacerated and torn by bone fragments which had been driven into it. He was unable to give any account of what had taken place, became unconscious, was taken to the hospital and ever since that time has been unable to perform any labor and only at times seemingly rational.
The law as to “street risks” is well stated in Matter of Redner v. Faber & Son (1918), 228 N. Y. 379, 119 N. E. 842, where the court quoting from Dennis v. White & Co., 1917 App. Cas. (Eng.) 479, said: “If a servant in the course of his master’s business has to pass along the public street, whether it be on foot or on a bicycle, or on an omnibus or car, and he sustains an accident by reason of the risk incidental to the streets, the accident arises out of as well as in the course of his employment. * * * The use of the streets by the workman merely to get to or from his work of course stands on a different footing altogether, but as soon as it is established that the work itself involves exposure to the perils of the streets the workman can recover for any injury so occasioned.”
It has been held that the risk of an employe being injured when using an automobile for transportation, by and when being stopped by officers of the law for speeding or other traffic violations is a risk to be anticipated. Wold v. Chevrolet Motor Co. (1920), 147 Minn. 17, 179 N. W. 219.
6. While there must be some causal relation between the employment and the injury, it is not necessary that the injury be one which ought to have been foreseen or expected, but it must be one which, after the event, may be seen to have had its origin in the nature of the employment. Mueller v. Klingman
In harmony with the cases last cited, we hold that the question as to whether the accident arose out of and in the course of the employment is an ultimate fact which must be found by the board and that the facts as found by the board are sufficient to sustain the award. The cases of Inland Steel Co. v. Lambert, supra, and Retmier v. Cruse (1918), 67 Ind. App. 192, 119 N. E. 32, in so far as they conflict with this opinion are hereby overruled.
There being no reversible error in the record, the award is affirmed.