130 N.E. 634 | NY | 1921
The claimant, while lifting a box of clay weighing 700 pounds or more, strained his left side, and hernia resulted. There is no doubt that this was an accidental injury within the meaning of the statute (Workmen's Compensation Law, sec. 3, subd. 7; Consol. Laws, chap. 67). Matter of Alpert v. Powers (
The question remains whether the award should be vacated as excessive. The claimant suffered the rupture on April 19, 1919. He remained in the service of the same employer till May 8 of the same year, when he was discharged. There is evidence that his capacity for heavy work had been impaired, if not destroyed. Light work he could do as efficiently and readily as before. Following his discharge on May 8, he was idle till June 1, when he went to work for the Race Track Association, receiving very soon the same wages as before the accident. His duty was to rake the lawn and do general work about the grounds. In that service he remained till August 2 of the same year. There is evidence, not contradicted, that he could have remained longer, and at the same wages, if he had been willing to serve as watchman. His duty as watchman would have been to sit at the gate and keep intruders off the track. From August 2 to October 4 he was idle again. He got a job on October 4, a few *525 days before the hearing. He testifies in general terms that in the weeks when he was idle, he looked for work and found none. He offers neither denial nor explanation of his refusal to accept the work which had been tendered. Compensation, if due at all, is to be measured by a prescribed percentage of "the difference between his average weekly wages and his wage earning capacity thereafter in the same employment or otherwise" (Workmen's Compensation Law, sec. 15, subds. 3 and 4). The latter factor in the computation has been treated by the commission as zero during the weeks of unemployment. On that basis there has been award for disability between May 8 and June 1, and between August 2 and October 4, the periods of idleness.
For the first of these periods there is evidence that sustains the finding. The claimant's search for work was fruitless. The inference is permissible that it was his own physical defects which made the quest a vain one. Failure to find work is, indeed, no ground for compensation if the failure has its origin in general business conditions, the slackness of the demand for labor (Cardiff Corporation v. Hall, 1911, 1 K.B. 1009, 1018;Durney's Case,
The second term of idleness (between August and October) brings up another question. Work was offered and refused. Earning capacity was then equal, if the claimant was willing to exert it, to capacity before the injury. We must hold him to the use of the powers which he had (Cardiff Corp. v. Hall, supra, p. 1019;Proctor Sons v. Robinson, 1911, 1 K.B. 1004; Lacione'sCase,
The order of the Appellate Division and the award of the industrial commission should be reversed, and a rehearing ordered, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; CHASE, J., dissents.
Order reversed, etc. *528
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