181 N.E. 76 | NY | 1932
The claimant, while working in a laundry, fell and in falling struck a table which was part of the equipment of the laundry. She sustained injuries to her teeth, roof of the mouth and chest which disabled her for some weeks. An award in her favor was reversed by the Appellate Division.
The injuries occurred in the course of the claimant's *139
employment. The fall was, we must assume on this record, due to a cardiac condition. The problem presented is whether the injuries suffered are "accidental injuries" which arose not only "in the course" of the employment, but also "out of" the employment. An injury can arise "out of" an employment only when it is related to the employment. "The injury must be received (1) while the workman is doing the duty he is employed to perform, and also (2) as a natural incident of the work. It must be one of the risks connected with the employment, flowing therefrom as a natural consequence and directly connnected with the work." (Matter ofHeitz v. Ruppert,
In most cases, accidental injuries received "in the course" of an employment arise from risks related to the employment. Not always. A purely fortuitous coincidence of time and place is not enough. There must be causal relation. An accidental injury is, from its nature, the unintended result of a combination of circumstances. Chance may dictate the coincidence in time or space of conditions which in combination produce catastrophe, but of course the result of the particular combination of conditions is dictated by the laws of nature, not of chance. Where conditions of the employment, including the location of the place of work, constitute a factor which in combination with other conditions produces accidental injury, the risk of such an injury is incident to the employment. That is true, though risk of similar injury is no greater in that employment than otherwise. Thus a fall may be due to a misstep in the course of the employment. All men are subject, during their waking hours, to the risk of a fall through a misstep or other mischance, alike when at home or at work. A clerk in a counting-house is no more subject to such a mischance than the public in general. None the less, when a clerk sustains injuries from a fall, through mischance, while working in a counting-house, the employment *140
is one of the factors which produces the fortuitous combination of circumstances which resulted in the accidental injury. So we held in Matter of Pasternack v. Federation of JewishCharities (
"A physical seizure unrelated to the employment is not such an accident as is compensable. (Matter of Hansen v. Turner Const.Co.,
In Matter of Mausert v. Albany Builders Supply Co.
(supra) the proof of causal connection between employment and injuries was clear. The injuries were suffered on the street; the injured employee fell from the seat of a wagon on which he was placed in the course of his employment as a driver. His position there subjected him to a hazard of injuries in case of a fall, different from the hazard of a fall under other conditions. InMatter of Andrews v. L. S. Amusement Corp. (
Some hazards are incident to the use of the street, and where in the course of his employment a workman is subjected to such "street risk" they become an incident of the employment, and injury resulting from them arises out of the employment, even though they are not confined to the employment and are common to all who use the street. So we decided in Matter of Katz v.Kadans Co. (
All hazards, arising from conditions attached to the place of work, must be a source of special danger to the employees, for only those who resort to that place are subject to those hazards. There is a general hazard, common to all who walk or work in the street, that some object falling from a building abutting upon the street may cause injury. None the less, the location of the place of employment subjects the workers there to a special danger that objects may fall from a particular building near the place of work. That is a risk incident to the employment. So we held in Matter of Filitti v. *143 Lerode Homes Corp. (
The case of Matter of Giliotti v. Hoffman Catering Co.
(
The same considerations apply to the instant case, with, perhaps, even greater force. The claimant was subject at all times and places to injury by a fall which might result in concussion, upon a hard surface. The hazard that in a fall she might incur injury, by striking against the table near which she was working at the time of the fall, attached to the place of employment. To that potential danger only those in that place were subject, and thus her employment called her into a zone of special danger. The potential danger of injury from a fall at *144 some other place might have been no less. It was not the same. Though there is danger of injury, from some combination of conditions, at all times and at all places, the potential danger that any particular combination will arise and cause injury is limited both in time and space, and within those limits there is a zone of special danger from that source. Whenever conditions attached to the place of employment or otherwise incident to the employment are factors in the catastrophic combination, the consequent injury arises out of the employment.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the award of the State Industrial Board confirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.
POUND, Ch. J., O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur with LEHMAN, J.; CRANE, J., dissents on authority of Matter of Andrews v. L. S. Amusement Corporation (
Order reversed, etc.