222 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1915
The dependent of the deceased employee has suggested a question whether the case is rightly here, because it is provided by the workmen’s compensation act as amended by St. 1912, c. 571, § 14, “that there shall be no appeal from a decree based upon an order or decision of the board which has not been presented to the court within ten days after the notice of the filing thereof by the board.” This does not mean that the case must be actually brought to the attention of a judge of the Superior Court within that time. It is a compliance with the statute if the required papers are presented to the court in the sense of being filed as a part of its records. The case is here rightly.
Otis McPhee was employed in the summer of 1913 as superintendent by the Atlantic Park Company, a subscriber under the workmen’s compensation act. The business of his employer was that of operating an amusement resort near Nantasket Beach in the town of Hull. In the performance of his duty as such employee, McPhee organized a fire brigade to protect the property of his employer. He was also a regular member of the fire department of the town of Hull and received for his services in that connection $50 per year, and was liable to a fine of fifty cents for an inexcusable absence from a fire. On the evening of June 22, 1913, a fire broke out in a garage distant about forty feet from the property of the subscriber.
The arbitration committee, whose findings have been confirmed by the Industrial Accident Board, reported that “McPhee, in his capacity as superintendent and as organizer of the volunteer fire department, went to the garage, for the double purpose of extinguishing the fire and protecting the buildings of his employer, the Atlantic Park Company, from the danger caused by said fire. McPhee was a volunteer member of the Hull fire de
The finding for the dependent was confirmed by a decree of the Superior Court
This finding stands upon the same footing as a verdict of a
There was evidence upon which this finding may rest. While the deceased was a member of the town fire department and as such required to attend the fire, it well might be that his paramount duty was owed to the subscriber to protect its property from destruction by fire and to prevent thereby a panic among its patrons and the disaster which might ensue. It does, not seem to us possible to say as matter of law that when he had exhausted the chemical of the subscriber and began working in connection with the fire apparatus of the town, he ceased acting primarily in the interests of his employer, who was the subscriber, and began working exclusively for the town. The interests of his general employer in the extinguishment of a fire in such threatening proximity to its property well may have been found to have been so dominant as to absorb the exclusive attention of McPhee and to have rendered him in the direction of his own conduct chiefly concerned to act for its interests as to the means employed and the result to be achieved in the particular service of extinguishing the fire. If this was so, then his efforts were directed to the promotion of the business of that general employer even though it happened that at the same time he was acting in accordance with his obligation to the town fire department. But under such circumstances the latter would be accidental and subsidiary, while the substantial and preponderant factor controlling his action would be the duty owed to his employer, who was the subscriber. Tornroos v. R. H. White Co. 220 Mass. 336. That the injury of the deceased was received “in the course of his employment” within the meaning of those words in the act cannot be pronounced unsupported by the evidence.
The insurer argues that the injury did not arise out of the employment. It relies in this regard upon that part of the opinion in McNicol’s Case, 215 Mass. 497, at page 499, where it was said, “an injury which cannot fairly be traced to the employment as a contributing proximate cause and which comes from a hazard to which the workmen would have been equally exposed apart from the employment,” does not arise out of the employment. But these words do not fairly describe what may have been found to be the facts here. It well may have been inferred that the im
The inhalation of damp smoke and drenching with water resulting in lobar pneumonia might have been found to be a “personal injury” within St. 1911, c. 751, Part II, § 1. Hurle’s Case, 217 Mass. 223. See Coyle v. John Watson, Ltd. [1915] A. C. 1.
Decree affirmed.
The case was submitted on briefs.
Entered by order of Jenney, J.