144 Minn. 105 | Minn. | 1919
Action to recover damages for personal injuries. The ease was dismissed, as a common law action, and retained for an award of compensation according to the terms of the compensation act. The plaintifE appeals from 'an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The plaintiff brought this action to recover on the defendant’s common law liability. The answer alleged that all three were under the compensation act, and the fact was so.
The evidence established a prima facie ease of common law liability. The court was of the opinion that the plaintiff, as a matter of law, was within the compensation act, and that plaintiff’s injury arose out of and in the course of his employment, within G. S. 1913, § 8195, and upon the motion of the defendant dismissed the action as a common law action and
The .plaintiff was a laundry driver. He had a down town route.. He used a horse and wagon, gathering laundry from the different hotels in the morning and returning it in the evening. He usually commenced work about six, stabled his horse at noon in a barn near the laundry, and commenced work again at 1:30 in the afternoon. On the day of his injury he worked in the forenoon and stabled his horse at the usual time. After lunch he was about town when he remembered that he had not collected laundry from the Brinsmead hotel as he should 'have done. It should have been taken at 11 and should have been at the laundry at 12. It was to be returned at five. He immediately went to the hotel, which was but a short distance away, took the bag of laundry on his back, and started for the laundry some six blocks distant. On the way he was injured by the auto truck.
At the close of all the testimony the defendant moved that the case be dismissed as a common law action and that the court either grant or deny compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. .The motion was granted. The defendant invited an award of compensation. It cannot contest the question of its liability to the extent to which the laundry company was liable. There is nothing now to do but fix compensation. See Mahowald v. Thompson-Starrett Co. 134 Minn. 113, 158 N. W. 913, 159 N. W. 565.
Order affirmed.