125 Me. 168 | Me. | 1926
Appeal by employer from award of Chairman of Industrial Accident Commission. Injury by accident is admitted; the issue is whether the injury was one arising out of and in course of claimant’s employment; upon the evidence submitted the Chairman so found.
The evidence of the claimant tended to show, and the Chairman was justified in finding that claimant was, on the date of the injury, a
So far as the testimony of the Chief of the Department tended to show that there were no general orders on some points, or that the conduct of the men was not uniform, the Chairman was warranted in accepting the positive statements of the claimant, if he believed them. Upon appeal from an award in his favor we cannot pass upon the weight of the evidence; it must be taken most favorably for the claimant.
The words “in course of” refer to time, place and circumstances, under which the accident takes place. Westman’s Case, 118 Maine, 138, 142. At the time of the injury the claimant was on duty; he was doing something which a man employed in such a calling may reasonably do within the time during which he is employed, and at a place where he might reasonably be during that time. Bryant v. Fissell, 84 N. J. L., 72, 86 Atl., 458. The fact that he was on his way home for his midday meal, in accordance with a routine permitted and approved by his superiors, did not in any manner, break or
The words “arising out of” mean that there must be some causal connection between the conditions under which the employee worked, and the injury which he received. The causative danger must be incidental to the character of the employment, and not independent of the relation of master and servant. The accident must be one resulting from a risk reasonably incident to the employment. Westman’s Case, 118 Maine, 133, 143. Mailman’s Case, 118 Maine, 172, 180.
We think that, this is not the case of a, common hazard to which persons having occasion to use the streets are exposed, but rather falls within the cases of hazard by reason of his employment. John Moran’s Case, 234 Mass., 566, 125 N. E., 591, in which the court says: “In the case at bar, the workman, to do the work of his employment, must continually stand in danger of receiving an injury from accidents resulting from exposure to whatever risks and hazards are commonly attendant on the use of public streets and conveyances, whieh risks to him are greater because more constant than those incidental to the occasional and casual use of such streets by persons who use them in the ordinary way.”
In the instant case the claimant was on duty at the time of the accident; the relationship of employer and employee still existed during the meal hours, and he was in a place where at that hour he might reasonably be in connection with his duties, and was there in the usual routine of his duties.
We are of the opinion that the causal relation between the employment and the injury was not too remote to preclude the legitimate inference that the risk which resulted in the injury was incidental to the conditions of the employment which exposed the employee to the injury. Keaney’s Case, 232 Mass., 532, and cases cited. The-finding of the Chairman is in harmony with the second general rule stated in Robert’s Case, 124 Maine, 129, 131.
Appeal dismissed.'
Decree below affirmed.