236 N.W. 466 | Minn. | 1931
1. The decedent, George G. Johnston, was for many years in the employ of the defendant W. S. Nott Company as a city salesman in Minneapolis working outside the company's place of business soliciting orders. It was his custom to report at 4:30 to 5 in the afternoon just before going home. On December 16, 1929, he reported at the usual time. When he came in Frederick Dumas, a vice president, was there, and in response to a question as to what occurred Dumas said:
A. "I said, 'Good evening, George, how are you?' and he said, 'Well, I guess I'm all right,' and he said, 'I fell out here coming in,' and I said, "I pretty nearly fell myself, George, it's pretty slippery,' and I said, 'Are you hurt?' and lie said, 'I don't know whether I am or not.'
Q. "Who said that?
A. "George did. He said, 'I'm going home,' and we walked out of the water-closet or wash-room and he crossed through the aisle this way (indicating) and I went this way and he crossed toward the back door and said, 'I'm going home.' "
This testimony was properly received as res gestae. The remark was made as the decedent came to the defendant's place of business and might be considered as somewhat in the nature of an exclamation. It indicated a recent fall. He said, "I fell out here coming in." He did not know whether he was hurt and said, "I'm going home." In Travelers Ins. Co. v. Sheppard,
2. The testimony of Dumas was the only competent proof of a fall of Johnston on the street as he was entering his employer's place of business. He took a street car home and showed some indisposition upon his arrival. His conversation with the plaintiff, his wife and sole dependent, could not be given. She said he looked haggard and pale. He had a "bad bump on the back of his head, very red and slightly swollen." He kept holding his head and sort of dozed off to sleep. This dozing off was not unusual. He suffered severely. About 9:30 a doctor was called. The doctor said:
"My examination showed that he had a bump on the back of his head a little bit to the right side. His pupils were unequal and reacted to light. He was breathing rapidly and his pulse was rapid, and he was very restless and the reflexes in his knee were absent and he vomited while I was there, and later on before I left respiration became slower and the pulse was slower and the headache apparently became more severe because he continued to complain about it." *312
The doctor stayed with him for a half hour or so. He gave him a hypodermic. He was called again after midnight. The deceased died at 1:30 in the morning. The doctor said the cause of his death was contusion and compression of the brain caused by some external violence; or, putting it in another way, the bump on the back of his head accounted for his death. There is no testimony of a cause for an injury except that given by Dumas. The evidence sustains the finding of an accidental fall in the course of the employe's employment resulting in his death.
3. The industrial commission found that the injury arose out of and in the course of the decedent's employment. In Hansen v. N.W. Fuel Co.
The early English rule as to street accidents was different but now is the one which we follow. Dennis v. A. J. White Co. [1917] A. C. 479, 116 L. T. R. 774; Thom v. Sinclair [1917] A. C. 127, 116 L. T. R. 609; Arkell v. Gudgeon, 87 L. J. K. B. 1104, 118 L. T. R. 258. In Dennis v. A. J. White Co. where a bicycle rider came into collision with a motor car, Lord Finlay, L. C. said ([1917] A. C. 481):
"It is quite immaterial that the risk was one which was shared by all members of the public who use bicycles for such a purpose. Such as it was, it was a risk to which the appellant was exposed in carrying out the orders of his employer. *313
"If a servant in the course of his master's business has to pass along the public street, whether it be on foot or on a bicycle, or on an omnibus or car, and he sustains an accident by reason of the risks incidental to the streets, the accident arises out of as well as in the course of his employment. The frequency or infrequency of the occasions on which the risk is incurred has nothing to do with the question whether an accident resulting from that risk arose out of the employment."
The same thought is given expression in Schroeder Daly Co. v. Industrial Comm.
"If it should be held that messengers, deliverymen, salesmen, and others who by the nature of their employment are required to be continually on the streets and highways, are not entitled to compensation for injuries received in the course of their employment if the injury occur on a street or highway, a large class of worthy applicants would be cut off and the workmen's compensation law emasculated. * * * The risk of injury to the applicant in this case was incidental to his use of the street in the course of his employment, and was peculiar to the employment in that the work of the employee could not be carried on without his subjecting himself to that risk; it therefore grew out of his employment. The fact that others may be exposed to like risks does not change the character of the risk to which the applicant was exposed. * * *"
We make no distinction between street accidents which result from slipping or falling and traffic accidents. Injuries resulting from slipping on streets while in the course of the employment are taken by the courts generally as arising out of the employment the same as a street accident through contact with traffic or other cause. Redner v. H. C. Faber Son,
The plaintiff is awarded $100 as attorney's fees in this court.
Order affirmed. *314