205 A.D. 791 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The business of the employer was the manufacture of moving picture films with office and principal place of business in New York city, where most of its pictures were produced. It had employed claimant as an actor. He was engaged at the studio in New York city as a moving picture man and had been employed for about four months prior to the accident.
The State Industrial Board has found: “ On March 1, 1921, while the said Paul Madderns was engaged in the regular course of his employment and while working for his employer on a boat which was tied to Pier 1 at Jersey City, N. J., and while being chased by one man along the edge of the boat, pursuant to directions of his employer, he tripped over another man and fell into the icy waters of the Hudson River.” The Board has further found that this sudden immersion in the icy waters brought on the disability from which claimant was suffering, namely, tuberculosis, at the time of the award in question. There is some evidence to sustain the fioding of the Board that the alleged disability arose out of the accident in question.
The employer was apparently carrying on a hazardous employment within the State of New York. The claimant was engaged in helping to produce a serial picture, most of which was produced at the studio, and a portion thereof which was being produced in the State of New Jersey at the time of the accident was a mere incident to claimant’s hazardous employment contracted for in the State of New York and principally carried on in that State. (Matter of Smith v. Heine Boiler Co., 224 N. Y. 9; Donohue v. Robertson Co., 205 App. Div. 176.)
The main question is whether the case comes within admiralty jurisdiction barring the State Industrial Board from jurisdiction to make an award. The mere fact that an accident occurred upon a boat located in navigable waters does not show conclusively that it was a matter within the admiralty jurisdiction. In McBride v. Standard Oil Co. (196 App. Div. 822) we affirmed an award to a chauffeur who was transferring barrels of gasoline to his employer’s truck from a barge. He was standing on the side of the barge and while making the barrels safe at the end of Ms truck, the brake on
The award should be affirmed, with costs in favor of the State Industrial Board.
Present — H. T. Kellogg, Acting P. J., Van Kirk, Hinman and Hasbrouck, JJ.
Award unanimously affirmed, with costs in favor of the State Industrial Board.