Petitioners Madin and his insurance carrier seek the annulment of an award of workmen’s compensation to James Richardson and Lethia Richardson, his wife.
*92 At the time hereinafter mentioned, Madin owned certain premises with 14 rental units and the Eichardsons were living in one of these rental units. Madin emplоyed the Eichardsons to act as caretakers and managers of the property and collect the rent. They were on duty 24 hours a day and were available to meet any problems that arose during those hours. For this they received 10 per cent of the rentals and a discount on the rent of the unit occupied by them; Eichardson was also to receive $1.50 per hour for any day labor performed by him.
About 2 o’clock in the morning on July 7, 1952, while the Eichardsons were in bed, a bulldozer, which was being used on property in the neighborhood, ran wild after being started without authority by some boys and rammed into the unit occupied by the Eichardsons, pushing them while in their beds through the walls of the unit and causing the injuries for which compensation was awarded. The facts in regard to the action of the bulldozer are fully set forth in
Richardson
v.
Ham,
Petitioners concede that the injuries occurred in the course of employment but say they did not arise out of the employment, and contend that section 4453 of the Labor Code, infra, and its interpretation and application to Mrs. Eichardson are unconstitutional.
Certain principles recently stated by this court are applicable to the facts of this case: “Though an injury to be compensable • must arise out of the employment, that is, occur by reason of a condition or incident of employment, the injury need not be of a kind anticipated by the emplоyer nor peculiar to the employment in the sense that it would not have occurred elsewhere.
(Pacific Emp. Ins. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
Consonant with those principlеs it has been held in various situations that injuries occurring in the course of employment also arise out of the employment and hence were compensable although the factor which put in motion the force causing the injury was something over which the employer had no control аnd with which he had no connection. In
Kimbol
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
*94
There are eases apparently to the contrary (see
Associated Indem. Corp.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
The commission’s award here may be supported by taking the narrow view that a portion of the employer’s premises injured the Richardsons—the falling walls and glass from the impact of the bulldozer (see
Enterprise Dairy Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com., supra,
“Then there are the ‘horseplay’ or ‘skylarking’ cases. At first in California recovery was not permitted an employee who was injured through horseplay or skylarking of his fellow employees. . . . But in
Pacific Emp. Ins. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
“Then we have cases where the courts have held that because the thing that injured the employee was an instrumentality of the employer, the injury is compensable even though the force which actually was responsible for the injury came from outside the employer’s premises.
“The first case on this subject was
Kimbol
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
“In
Pacific Indem. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
“As far back as 1930, a writer in 18 California Law Review, page 562, said: ‘When an employment places an employee at any given place to do his work, indoors or outdoors, and the employee so placed is injured because at work in that spot, compensation should be awarded for the injury, except in the field of disease where it is needed to distinguish industrial from non-industrial diseases.’ The trend of the decisions in this state since that date has been to support that doctrine, although, as pointed out, the courts have been reluctant to use that language. . . .
“The latest trend is shown by statements such as the following: ‘The theory upon which the workmen’s compensation laws were enacted was that evidence should not be required to establish all the factors of the workman’s environment, but that in order to receive an award he needs show merely that his work brought him within the range of danger by requiring his presence in the precincts of his emрloyer’s premises at the time the peril struck. . . . Compensable injuries need not be of the kind anticipated by the employer or peculiar to the employment. ... It is sufficient that the injury results from a danger to which he was exposed as an employee.’
(Pacific Indem. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com., supra,
Petitioners assert that Mrs. Richardson was earning less *97 than $15 per week and that an award based on $15 per week earnings under section 4453 of the Labor Code (Workmen’s Compensation Laws) deprived them of property without due process of law.
The commission found that Mrs. Richardson’s injuries caused temporary disability from July 8 to December 15, 1952, but awarded nothing because she sustained no “wage loss”; that the injury caused a permanent disability of 21 per cent entitling her to $9.75 per week for 84 weеks in the total sum of $819 “based upon minimum earnings.” [8] Section 4453 provided: “In computing average annual earnings for purposes of temporary disability indemnity only, the average weekly earnings shall be taken at not less than . . . ($15) nor more than . . . ($53.85). In computing average annual earnings for purposes of permanent disability indemnity, the average weekly earnings shall be taken at not less than . . . ($15) nor more than . . . ($46.16). Between these limits the average weekly earnings, except as provided in Sections 4456 to 4459, shall be arrived at as follows:...”
*
By that section the Legislature has in effect said that the earning capacity of any person covered by the workmen’s compensation laws shall not be computed at less than $15 per week. We find nothing arbitrary or unreasonable in such a provision. The Legislature could reasonably conclude that the great bulk of workers would have earnings of аt least that sum. In
New York Cent. R. Co.
v.
Bianc,
*98
“. . . As was stated in the Arizona case,
ante,
429 [Arizona Employers’ Liability Cases,
The awards are affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., Spence, J., and McComb, J., concurred.
Notes
It was amended in 1955 to change the figures to $23.08 and $61.54 on temporary disability and to $23.08 and $53.85 on permanent disability. (Stats. 1955, ch. 956.)
