47 N.E.2d 964 | Ind. | 1943
ON PETITION TO TRANSFER. The appellee, a carpenter, was injured while repairing a farm building on the appellant's farm. The Appellate Court affirmed an award of the Industrial Board to the appellee.
The appellant has petitioned for a transfer of the cause to this court assigning as reasons therefor that the Appellate Court erroneously decided certain new questions of law.
The first question presented by the petition to transfer is that the appellee was a casual employee within the meaning of § 40-1701, Burns' 1933 (1940 Replacement), § 16449, Baldwin's 1934, which defines "employee" as used in the Workmen's Compensation Act, as including every person in the service of another, under any contract of hire or apprenticeship, "except one whose employment is both casual and not in the usual course of the trade, business, occupation or profession of the employer." The quoted exception appears in the original Compensation Act in the same words. Acts of 1915, ch. 106, § 76, par. b, p. 415.
Many decisions of the Indiana Appellate Court have construed these words as not excluding an employee whose work was casual if the work was necessary to the employer's business.
In Caca v. Woodruff (1919),
In 1923, in Crawfordsville Shale Brick v. Starbuck (1924),
Again it was decided, in Wagner v. Wooley (1926),
After these three decisions construing the language of this provision the Legislature, in 1929, re-enacted this particular subsection of the statute without changing a word in this exception. Acts of 1929, ch. 172, § 73, subsection b, p. 566.
Thereafter, in 1931, in Olsen v. Canter (1931),
In 1933, the Legislature amended this section but again retained the same language in this exception.
The Legislature, in 1937, amended several sections of the Workmen's Compensation Law, but did not change this section. In 1938, in J.P.O. Sandwich Shop, Inc. v. Papadopoulos (1938),
In 1939, in the case of Kunkler v. Mauch (1940),
In view of the conduct of the Legislature and this long line of decisions uniformly holding that employment "in the usual course" of the employer's business means employment on any work in connection with and reasonably necessary to the employer's business, we may not at this late date say that the Appellate Court has misinterpreted the intention of the Legislature.
By the repeated re-enactment of this section of the act without changing the wording of the exception we may say that the Legislature has adopted the construction of the Appellate 1. Court even though we might now feel that such construction did not correctly interpret the original intention of the Legislature. As we said in State, ex rel., v. Miller, Trustee
(1923),
Prior to the decision in Warren v. Indiana Telephone Co.
(1940),
We also have many decisions of this court holding that the failure of the Legislature to change a statute *319
after a line of decisions of a court of last resort giving 2. the statute a certain construction amounts to an acquiescence by the Legislature in the construction of the court and that such construction should not then be disregarded or lightly treated. Loeb et al. v. Mathis (1872),
Another question presented by the petition to transfer is whether the appellee was a "farm" or "agricultural" employee within the meaning of the act.
As originally enacted in 1915, the act expressly excluded casual employees as defined in § 76, farm and agricultural laborers and domestic servants. Acts of 1915, ch. 106, § 9, p. 394. In 1917, in In Re Boyer (1917),
In 1919, § 9 of the Workmen's Compensation Act was amended by substituting "farm or agricultural employees" for "farm or agricultural laborers." Acts of 1919, ch. 57, p. 158.
Thereafter, in 1925, the Appellate Court held that a regular employee on a chicken farm was a farm employee and therefore not covered by the act. Fleckles v. Hille (1925),
Again in the same year in Dowery v. State of Indiana
(1925),
Thereafter, in 1929, Acts of 1929, ch. 172, p. 539, this section was re-enacted and the language here in question was not changed.
In Makeever v. Marlin (1931),
In 1935, in Hahn v. Grimm,
In 1937, the Legislature amended several sections of the act but this one was left unchanged.
Here, again, we believe that the Legislature by failing to change the provision in the many intervening sessions and by re-enactment of the provision in 1929 have both acquiesced 3. in and adopted the interpretation of the Appellate Court.
While these two questions are new in the sense that this court has not heretofore passed upon them, we feel that we are bound by the many decisions of the Appellate Court construing the two provisions and by the conduct of the Legislature in re-enacting and amending these sections without any change of the particular provisions here in question.
The petition to transfer is therefore denied.
NOTE. — Reported in