199 Ill. App. 530 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a proceeding to recover compensation under the so-called Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1911 (J. & A. If 5449 et seq.), for the death of Jacob Hoffman, an employee of appellant. On appeal from an award of the arbitrators to the Circuit Court, the matter was heard de novo before that court without a jury, and at the close of plaintiff’s case the defendant moved for a finding in its favor. The motion was overruled, whereupon the defendant rested, and the court entered a finding for plaintiff and a judgment for $3,500 to be paid in instalments, as provided under said act. From such judgment this appeal was taken.
The evidence fairly tended t'o show these facts: Hoffman had been working for appellant about nine years. He was paid on the basis of hours’ work. On the day of the accident he was employed by appellant in sheet metal work on the roof of a building in the course of construction. The stairway used for getting up and down in the building had no railing on one side of it and was covered with small wooden blocks and other material from the carpentering. Hoffman worked up to the noon hour when he left the building for lunch. On returning therefrom he said to his foreman, in substance, that as there was not enough work for all the men on the job for the rest of the day he would go to the shop, and if there was no work there he would go home. Thereupon his helper took his tools and he proceeded to descend the stairway. When part way down it he was seen to slip or trip and fall headlong over its open side to the floor. From the injury received he died the same day.
Appellant’s main contention is that such a state of facts does not present a cáse where the injury was one “arising out of and in the course of employment.” (Hurd’s Rev. St. 1911, p. 1136 [J. & A. fí 5449].) In that we do not concur. The leaving of the premises where he was employed was so closely connected with his employment as to render it a necessary incident thereof. As said in Terlecki v. Strauss, 85 N. J. L. 454 (4 N. C. C. A. 584): “It is a necessary implication of the contract that the workman shall come to his work and shall leave with reasonable speed when the work is over. ’ ’ In that case the employee suffered an accident while combing her hair in preparation to go home. The court said that while the employment was not the proximate cause of the accident “it was a cause in the sense that, but for the employment, the accident would not have happened,” and held that the accident arose out of and in the course of the employment. It further said that it would be too narrow a construction to limit the benefit of the statute to the time the workman is actually employed. There can be little, doubt that on authority the relation of master and servant could be deemed to have existed while the workman was getting out of the building where he had to go in his employment.
But cases have arisen under a similar law on analogous facts where the principle of construction stated in the Terlecki case, supra, has found application. (Donovan’s case, 217 Mass. 76 [4 N. C. C. A. 549]; Sundine’s case, 218 Mass. 1 [5 N. C. C. A. 616]; Rayner v. Sligh Furniture Co., 180 Mich. 168 [4 N. C. C. A. 851].) A like construction has been given to these words in English cases, cited in the foregoing cases. We do not deem it necessary to enlarge upon the discussion of this subject, the principle applicable here being so tersely and clearly stated in the Terlecki case, supra.
That defendant was bound by the act is not questioned but it is contended that there was no proof that the employee had elected to be bound thereby. As said in Dietz v. Big Muddy Coal Co., 263 Ill. 486 (5 N. C. C. A. 424), the employer and employee became subject to the act “without any affirmative action on their part. The elective feature of the act is to be exercised to avoid being governed thereby, and not to cause the act to be applied in any given case.” If the employee was not bound it was a matter of defense, defendant practically admitting it was bound by the act.
It is also contended by appellant that the proof is as consistent with nonliability as liability. The contention is based on the testimony of one witness that the deceased was not steady on his legs, his eyesight was bad, and he was subject to dizzy spells. Taking the evidence as a whole we think it makes a prima facie case and supports the inference that he lost his balance from walking over the loose blocks on the stairway. We think the judgment should be affirmed.
Affirmed.