22 A.2d 61 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1941
Argued April 25, 1941. This workmen's compensation death claim naturally excites one's sympathy, but it is subject to the condition uniformly imposed in all such claims, viz, that compensation is payable only if the death of the employee accidentally occurred in the course of hisemployment.
By virtue of the provisions of the Act of June 4, 1937, P.L. 1552, claimant's husband, Albert E. Lees, must be regarded as a limited or provisional employee of the Borough of Ferndale on October 12, 1938, the day of the fatal accident. He was a member of the Ferndale Volunteer Fire Company, and by virtue thereof became entitled to compensation if he was accidentally injured while, as such employee, he was actually engaged as a fireman, or while going to or returning from any fire, which the fire company of which he was a member attended, or while performing any otherduties of such company. It is clear that the employment must be based on his membership in a volunteer fire company and hisperformance of duties as such member, and be confined to such duties as he might be called upon by the proper authority to perform as a member of that company. He was not a general employee of the borough, (Shindledecker et al. v. Borough of NewBethlehem,
Claimant's husband lived with his wife and four minor children in his home, No. 543 Summit Avenue, Johnstown, Pa. It was one and a half stories high in front and two at the rear. So far as the record shows he had spent the evening of October 12, 1938 at home with his family. Certainly it was not shown that he was engaged that night on any business or duties for the fire company. About 10:45 o'clock, when the children were upstairs asleep in bed, he went out of the house to the yard in the rear for the purpose of tying up his dog. While he was there, his wife, this claimant, who was on the first or street floor, screamed "Albert, the house is on fire, the house is on fire." He rushed at once into the house, entering through a basement kitchen at the rear. He ran upstairs to the first or street floor, and then, while ascending the stairway leading to the second floor he found his oldest daughter and a younger child whom she had pulled out of the flames. This child's clothing was on fire. The father tore the clothing off and put out the flames, and then rushed up the stairs and entered the part of the house where the youngest child was, or had been, sleeping; and he was not seen again until the members of the fire company, who had come in response to the calls and screams of the wife and the two older children, found him burned to death about an hour later. The child whom he attempted to rescue was also killed in the fire.
The rules of the Ferndale Volunteer Fire Company provide thatat the alarm of fire, the members shall report for duty at the engine house, unless more expedient to go directly to the fire,but shall in all cases present themselves to the fire chief, or in his absence, to the next officer in charge, for assignment toduty.
The narrow question here involved is, was the act of claimant's husband in rushing into the house, following the outcry of his wife, in an endeavor to rescue his children, done in his capacity as a fireman, and by reason *73 of his membership in the volunteer fire company, or was it the spontaneous impulse of a father seeking to save his children? Sad as the outcome may be, we can see nothing in the circumstances above related that distinguishes his conduct from what he would have done if he had not been a member of the fire company. There is nothing in the record to show that his attempted rescue of his little child was undertaken in his capacity as a member of the fire company and employee of the borough rather than in his individual relation as a husband and father.
None of the cases cited and relied on by the board, and by the court below in sustaining the award of compensation to the widow and children, goes as far as this decision does, or justifies an award in the circumstances present in this case.
In Sonnett v. Stowe Twp.,
So in Sames v. Boro. of Perkasie,
In Barclay-Westmoreland Trust Co. v. Latrobe Borough,
In Badolato v. Berwick Borough,
On the other hand, in Versellesi v. Elizabeth Twp.,
And in Shindledecker et al. v. Borough of New Bethlehem, *77
The case most nearly like this one in its facts is Graham v.Philipsburg Borough, 15 Pa. W.C.B. Dec. 341, where a member of a volunteer fire company received some burns while putting out a small fire which began on his garage roof while he was working on it. The board, in reversing a referee's award in his favor, said that he was not in the employ of the borough during the few minutes needed to put out the fire, but that he was then working on his own account. While the injuries *79 sustained in that fire were minor in character, the principle would have been the same if he had lost his life in putting out the fire.
If the fire had broken out in Lees' home after he was in bed and asleep, and he had been killed in an attempt to fight his way out of the burning house, could it be seriously contended that in so doing he was acting as the servant or employee of the borough rather than as an individual bent on escaping the fire?
The burden of establishing the necessary facts to support the conclusion that the deceased was in the course of his employmentas a fireman at the time he was fatally injured, was on the claimant: McDermott v. Sun Indemnity Co.,
In our opinion there is nothing in the evidence to support the conclusion that when Lees rushed into the house following the outcry of his wife he was acting in the capacity of an employee of the borough.
The judgment is reversed and judgment is now entered for the defendants.