150 P.2d 301 | Colo. | 1944
CLAIMANT, John P. Mambourg, filed with the Industrial Commission a claim for compensation against the Gates Rubber Company, his employer, for injuries allegedly sustained in an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. A referee of the commission found for claimant. The finding was approved by the commission and compensation awarded. The employer, self-insured, in regular course, instituted an action in the district court where judgment was entered sustaining the award of the commission. To reverse that judgment, employer prosecutes a writ of error.
Only one issue is raised by the specification of points, namely, whether the accident arose out of the employment. There is no conflict in the evidence. Claimant, with a fellow employee, was rolling fabric, or cords, between two sheets of rubber. The rubber is described as synthetic and the sheets of rubber were lumpy so that the finished product was not of the character desired. The two employees stopped the machine and sent to the laboratory for a technician to determine the trouble. Claimant sat down on an eighteen-inch roller, or spool, known as a liner, and was talking with his fellow employee about the difficulty. Another employee came along, and seeing him there, in a spirit of play gave the roller a spin and threw claimant backwards. His back struck an iron bar injuring three of his vertebra, for which injury and the ensuing disability he claimed compensation.
There appear to be two divergent lines of authority, under one of them such accidents are held to arise out *482 of the employment, and under the other they are held not to arise out of the employment. The commission and the district court adopted the former. The employer contends that the latter line of authorities announce the correct rule and that Colorado is committed to this rule.
The referee made very complete findings and therein set forth the law which he deemed properly applicable to the case. The findings contain what is in effect a brief in support of the rule followed. The basis of the rule allowing compensation in such cases is well stated in Chambers v. Union Oil Co.,
In Cassell v. United States F. G. Co.,
In each of the foregoing cases claimant, as is true also in the instant case, was not engaging in the pranks that caused the injury.
In Leonbruno v. Champlain Silk Mills,
On the other hand, the employer cites a number of cases which support a contrary view. In Hulley v. Moosbrugger,
In Lee's Case,
To similar effect are: Pacific Employers' Ins. Co. v.Division of Indus. Acc. Safety,
The employer calls attention to our decision in Olson-Hallv. Industrial Com.,
Our attention further is called to the recent case of *485 Industrial Commission v. Betz,
Counsel for the employer then say that our decision inMcKnight v. Houck,
In the McKnight case two employees were sent to count cattle and directed to go prepared to shoot any dogs or coyotes found running the stock. Upon their return they stabled their horses and started for the bunkhouse. On the way they "each drew their guns to see which one could draw it the quicker and some way the gun went off and shot the boy." The commission denied compensation, the district court upheld the commission, and we affirmed its judgment. It should be noted that both were participating in the action. That it was not intended to determine a case where the injury occurs to a nonparticipant is clear from the language of our opinion: "This gun play was no part of the duties of the boys and there is no evidence that their employer had knowledge of such previous practice. The two had stepped aside from their employment and were amusing *486 themselves in a manner utterly foreign to it. This was no industrial accident. It is entirely unrelated to those cases in which an employee, attending to his duties, is murdered by a third person. Neither is there here any question of non-participation of deceased in the play, nor of the acquiescence of the employer."
It is contended that our opinion in Rocky MountainCo. v. Kruzic,
[1-3] We think our ruling in that case is not determinative of the case before us; nor is our holding in *487 Industrial Commission v. Strome,
Judgment affirmed. *488