126 N.E. 350 | NY | 1920
The claimant is a member of the police force of the city of New York with the rank of patrolman. He was detailed to service at the thirty-seventh precinct police station. His chief duties there were to guard the prisoners and to keep part of the building in order. On June 11, 1918, while standing on a box in order to remove an electric light bulb, he was thrown to the floor by the breaking of the box; and disability for a little more than a month resulted from his injuries. The question is whether the case is within the Workmen's Compensation Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 67).
Employees of the state or of a municipal corporation have the protection of the statute if they are engaged in one or more of the enumerated hazardous employments (Workmen's Comp. Law, § 3, subds. 3 and 4; § 2, subd. 43). To sustain the award, we must be able to say that the claimant was an employee so engaged, when his *19
injuries were suffered. The argument is that he comes within two groups: group 44 of section 2, which includes "employment as a keeper, guard, nurse or orderly in a prison, reformatory, insane asylum or hospital, maintained or operated by the state or municipal corporation or other subdivision thereof," and group 42, which includes the "maintenance and care of buildings." We think the claimant has not brought himself within either of these classes. His occupation was not that of a turnkey or keeper. It was not that of the maintenance or care of buildings. His occupation was that of a patrolman, and his position a public office, with functions which, however diverse, have an identity all their own (Blynn v. City of Pontiac,
Any other conclusion involves the scheme of the statute in hopeless vagaries. It means that in awarding compensation to members of the police force, the typical hazards have been ignored, and the trivial ones rewarded. The officer who battles with a burglar has been excluded, and the one who spends his days in the shelter of the station has been singled out for protection. We will not readily impute to the legislature a discrimination so unreasonable. The occupation of a policeman, if there had been any purpose to bring it within the statute, would have been brought there in its entirety. Discrimination, *20 were there any, would be in favor of the hazards that are greatest, and not of those that are least.
The truth is that the claimant and his brother officers do not need the protection of the Workmen's Compensation Law, and the legislature did not mean that they should have it. They do not need it, because compensation is assured to them by an independent statute, with its own special and comprehensive scheme. In case of temporary disability, incurred in the performance of duty, there may be leave of absence on full pay (Greater N.Y. Charter, § 292; Police Department Rule, 597). In case of permanent disability or death, there are pensions for the officer, and for his widow or children (Greater N.Y. Charter, §§ 354, 355). We cannot think that this carefully developed scheme for the relief of policemen and their dependents has been mutilated, if not altogether superseded, whenever a policeman does something which is also done by a workman in one of the hazardous employments. The legislature must speak more plainly before we will adopt a construction that leads to such results. The special statute stands, untouched by a later statute of general application, unless the purpose to destroy the special scheme is unmistakably declared (Matter of Commissioners ofCentral Park,
The order of the Appellate Division and the award of the Industrial Commission should be reversed, and the claim dismissed, without costs to either party.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CHASE, COLLIN, POUND, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *21