285 N.Y. 443 | NY | 1941
Claimant-respondent has been awarded workmen's compensation benefits for an injury sustained by her while working for defendant-appellant, the City of New York. Claimant was engaged as a telephone operator and receptionist in one of the offices of the city's Board of Water Supply. Her work in itself was not one of the hazardous employments listed in the Workmen's Compensation Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 67). The Industrial Board found, however, that the Board of Water Supply of the City of New York operates waterworks, a hazardous employment (Workmen's Compensation Law, § 3, subd. 1, group 7), and that the work of claimant was "incidental" thereto. These findings of fact are supported by testimony.
The city contends that the Workmen's Compensation Law covers only those municipal employees actually engaged in hazardous employments and not those whose work is found to be incidental to such an employment
Section 3, subdivision 1, of the Workmen's Compensation Law lists the hazardous employments in which compensation for injuries and deaths shall be payable. The first *446 fifteen groups are lists of specific employments, including "Operation of Waterworks." Group 16 covers all employments by the State of New York. Then comes "Group 17. Any employment enumerated in the foregoing groups and carried on by a municipal corporation or other subdivision of the state, notwithstanding the definition of the term `employment' in subdivision five of section two of this chapter." (The reference to subdivision 5 of section 2 was necessary to exclude the requirement that the employer's business or occupation had to be carried on by him "for pecuniary gain.")
If the employer here were a private corporation operating a waterworks the claim would unquestionably come within the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Law. Whatever doubt existed as to this before 1916 was resolved by the amendment in that year of section 2, subdivision 4, of the law (see L. 1916, ch. 622) to include not only claims of employees actually engaged in hazardous work for an employer but also the claims of all the employees in the service of an employer whose principal business was that of conducting a hazardous employment. (Matter of Dose
v. Moehle Lithographic Co.,
We are of the opinion that group 17 of section
Appellant maintains that "the Industrial Board and the Appellate Division could not have arrived at the conclusion which they reached without resorting to Group 18" and that group 18 is never applicable to municipal employments, citing Matter ofStoerzer v. City of New York (
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
LOUGHRAN, FINCH, RIPPEY, LEWIS and CONWAY, JJ., concur; LEHMAN, Ch. J., taking no part.
Order affirmed. *448