In this proceeding under the workmen’s compensation act, Francesco Ferrara, the employee, received injuries from frost bites which resulted in the loss of the index finger of the left hand above the second joint and of the second finger of the right hand above the second joint. He was awarded compensation and the insurer of the Montrose Construction Company appealed.
There was evidence that Ferrara was in the general employment of Ralph Guerro, a teamster who lent to the Montrose Construction Company carts, horses and drivers; that the business of the Montrose Construction Company was the collection of ashes; that on the day of the accident the employee was directed by a foreman of the Montrose Construction Company where to go and to empty the barrels into his cart and to assist in dumping the ashes when he came to the “dump.” There was evidence from which it could be found that work of collecting and unloading the ashes was under the direction of the agents of the Montrose Construction Company; “that the Montrose Construction Company was to tell the drivers what to do”; that Angelo Zito who was acting as foreman of that company gave the drivers of the teams their instructions, and that he “told . . . [Ferraro] to go there and what street to go to.” There was additional evidence bearing on the question of the supervision of the work in which Ferrara was engaged, indicating that it was under the control and direction of the Montrose Construction Company; that while Ferrara had the care and control of the team, the place where he was to work and the way in which the work was to be done were to be controlled by that company, and the transaction between it and the general employer amounted merely to a loan of the general employer’s servant. As the right to control Ferrara was,
It appeared that the day in question was very cold; that “The men told Angelo that it was too cold, and Angelo told them to 'hurry up and do something.’ Then they told Angelo that the best thing to do was to stop work, and Angelo said: 'No, the weather is all right.’” A witness testified that Ferrara complained of the cold; that he said he could not move his fingers and “could not dump his load of ashes.” The employee testified that “He was loading the cart on the long street . . . The land is low out there; about sea level. It was not very far from the water where they were dumping. It was coldest where the ashes were loaded . . . There was a wind blowing that day.” There was further evidence that the day was cold and a high wind was blowing; that the men “started a fire at the dump and the boss came along and told . . . [them] that . . . [they] couldn’t do it.” A witness stated he had to keep working all the time. It was found that the employee “was especially exposed by reason of the performance of his work as a teamster out in the open without any covering .... [He] was not at liberty to stop his work to prevent his hands from being frozen . . . .”
Taking into account the fact that the employee was constantly at work in the open on the day he was injured with no opportunity to protect himself, the condition of the place of his employment, and its nature, the wind and the cold, he was in fact exposed to a greater danger of being frozen than the ordinary outdoor worker. McManaman’s Case, 224 Mass. 554. See McCarthy’s Case, 232 Mass. 557.
Decree affirmed.