277 Mass. 418 | Mass. | 1931
This is an appeal by the claimant from a decree entered in the Superior Court reversing a decision of the Industrial Accident Board. The deceased employee worked as a janitor and caretaker of the apartments Owned by the Lion Realty Company at numbers 3-17 Durham Street and 7-11 Blackwood Street in the city of Boston. In connection with this employment he was authorized to rent apartments and collect rents. On April 14, 1930, at about eight o’clock in the evening, he fell from the roof down the air shaft at number 9 Blackwood Street, and was killed.
There was evidence tending to show that on April 10, 1930, the general manager of the apartments telephoned the employee and instructed him to go to number 11 Black-wood Street and see what repairs were required, and that about noon of April 14 the general manager’s secretary telephoned the employee to see what rents could be collected, and to inspect apartments that were vacant and see that they were cleaned before prospective tenants came to look at them. The secretary was unable to state which apartments were referred to but she stated they were certain ones that were to be painted the next morning. The evidence showed that they were those numbered 2 and 4 at number 11 Blackwood Street. The deceased was not seen at number 11 Blackwood Street after the afternoon of April 14.
The claimant, who was the widow of the employee, testified that after supper that evening when her husband left his home he said to her, “he would have to try and get the rents that Mr. Baxter called up that morning and asked him to go over to Blackwood Street, he said he would have to try and get them and take them down the next day.” Baxter was the manager’s secretary. This testimony of the conversation between the claimant and her husband was admitted without objection by the insurer. The employee
The three apartment houses on Blackwood Street numbered. 7, 9 and 11 adjoin one another, and, by means of a flight of stairs from the top floor, the roof of each could be reached through the door of a penthouse on each building. At the time of the accident there was evidence to show that the door of the penthouse on number 9 was locked. It would therefore appear that to reach the roof the deceased must have gone through the penthouse door on either number 7 or number 11, and the single member so found. Each apartment building had an air shaft leading from the roof to the ground. The air shafts were open and unguarded except that they were surrounded by a roof coping which was twelve and one half inches from the roof level. The distance from the penthouse door on number 11 to the air shaft at number 9, where the accident occurred, was fifty feet. A witness called by the claimant testified that he was a tenant living on the top floor of number 9 Blackwood Street; that his sitting room was on the air shaft; that about eight o’clock on the evening of April 14 he heard a noise go down by his window; that “It was down the air shaft that witness heard this noise.” He further testified that he lowered a flash-light down in the air shaft and saw a man. lying at the bottom. This man was discovered to be the deceased employee.
The single member found that “On April 14, 1930, the deceased left the supper table, and no one is able to tell of his immediate movements and intentions but he did go to the roof of the Blackwood Street property and fell down the air shaft at No. 9, meeting his death instantly .... The deceased had a right, because of his duties, to be on the roof at any time, and the condition of the roof was a risk incidental to his employment. The burden of proof has been sustained that the employee received a personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment which caused his death on April 14, 1930.” Accordingly compensation was awarded to the claimant.
A decree was entered in the Superior Court reversing the decision of the Industrial Accident Board and dismissing the claim for compensation; from this decree the claimant appealed.
To establish a claim for compensation under the. act there must be evidence from which a finding is warranted that the injury or death occurred in the employment and arose out of it, yet it is not necessary for the claimant to prove the precise cause which produced such injury or death. Belanger’s Case, 274 Mass. 371, 374. A claim for compensation under the act cannot rest merely on speculation or conjecture. Sponatski’s Case, 220 Mass. 526, 527, 528.
Having these well settled principles in mind, we consider the evidence upon the view most favorable to the claimant. The undisputed evidence shows that the deceased employee was a janitor and caretaker of buildings of the employer and' as a part of his employment he collected rents', rented apartments and saw that they were cleaned and put in condition for tenants. It may be assumed that as janitor and caretaker he was authorized to perform any other duties incidental to his employment.' When he left his home on the evening of April 14 it was for the purpose, so far as the evidence shows, of collecting rents. There is.no evidence to show that he went upon the roof for any purpose connected with his employment, or what, if anything, he did whüe he was there. There was no eye witness to the accident. All that appears is that he went upon the roof about eight o’clock in the evening, that a noise was heard in the air
The case at bar is distinguishable from Von Ette’s Case, 223 Mass. 56, and other cases where a finding in favor of the claimant was sustained.
The testimony of the claimant in her direct examination that when her husband left the house he told her “he would have to try and get the rents ” was a private conversation, and if objected to should have been excluded, G. L. c. 233, § 20; Sampson v. Sampson, 223 Mass. 451, 458, but having been admitted without objection it was entitled to its probative force. Commonwealth v. Wakelin, 230 Mass. 567, 576. Diaz v. United States, 223 U. S. 442, 450. It is apparent that the admission of this evidence did not affect the decision of the single member who found that after the employee left his house no one was able to describe his movements or intentions.
Decree affirmed.