259 P. 825 | Mont. | 1927
Mr. L.A. Foot, Attorney General, and Mr. C.N. Davidson, Assistant Attorney General, for Respondent, submitted a brief;Mr. Davidson argued the cause orally. On July 26, 1926, while the three county commissioners of Lewis and Clark county were returning from a trip of examination and inspection of the county roads, the automobile in which they were riding turned over while rounding a sharp curve and William A. Moore, the chairman of the board, was killed. He left surviving and depending upon him a wife and two minor children. Claim was made in their behalf for compensation under the terms of the Workmen's Compensation Act. The Industrial Accident Board denied the claim, and the district court of Lewis and Clark county upon appeal, affirmed the action of the board. Hence an appeal to this court.
The death of Mr. Moore arose out of and in the course of his employment. Under the provisions of section 2863, Revised Codes of 1921, as amended by section 3 of Chapter 121 of the 1925 Session Laws, page 206, elected and appointed paid public officers who are connected with or engaged in hazardous occupations are included as workmen and are entitled to the protection of the Act. *138
The Compensation Act is intended to apply to all inherently hazardous works and occupations in this state (sec. 2847, Rev. Codes 1921), and it was the intention of the legislature to include all such in sections 2848, 2849, 2850 and 2851, Revised Codes 1921, but in none of these is there any reference to the duties or work of a county commissioner.
Section 2852, Revised Codes 1921, says: "If there be or arise[1] any hazardous occupation or work other than hereinbefore enumerated, it shall come under this Act and its terms, conditions, and provisions as fully and completely as if hereinbefore enumerated."
Respecting the effect of this section this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Galen, in Page v. New York Realty Co.,
The provisions of section 3 of Chapter 121, supra, went no[2] further than to bring paid public officers who are connected with or are engaged in hazardous occupations, within the protection of the Act. It must be held that a hazardous occupation, as contemplated by the Compensation Act, is limited to those occupations enumerated in the Act and to others of the same general character.
The board of county commissioners are the chief executive[3] officers of the county government. Section 4465, Revised Codes 1921, as amended by Chapter 95 of the 1923 Session Laws, page 254, prescribes in twenty-seven sections, either specifically or generally, the duties and obligations of the *139 board. It is their duty to supervise the official conduct of all county officers and, in some measure, the officers of all districts and other subdivisions of the county. Most of the duties imposed upon the board have to do with the business affairs of the county which must be done while the board is convened at the county seat. Among other duties they are obliged to "lay out, maintain, control, and manage public highways, ferries and bridges within the county and levy such tax therefor as is required by law," and "whenever any public highway becomes obstructed from any cause, or any bridge needs repairing or becomes dangerous for the passage of teams or travelers, the board of county commissioners, or the supervisor of the road district, if there be one, upon being notified thereof, must forthwith cause such obstruction to be removed, or bridge repaired, for which purpose the board of county commissioners or the road supervisor of the district may order out such number of inhabitants of the district as may be necessary to aid in removing such obstruction or repairing such bridge." (Sec. 1627, Rev. Codes 1921.)
The duty imposed upon the commissioners by this section is mandatory and imperative, and a failure to discharge it may be serious to them, as is illustrated by the cases of Smith v.Zimmer,
The legislature has not pronounced the occupation of county commissioner to be hazardous, nor has the Industrial Accident Board, assuming that it has the authority to do so. The board considered the matter but did not "feel justified in attempting to force these officials to carry compensation upon themselves." In this situation the trial court upon the record before it adjudged correctly in affirming the action of the board.
The plight of the unfortunate widow and children of the late commissioner is one which calls strongly upon our sympathy, but we, too, are powerless to do other than enter an order of affirmance.
In view of the reluctance of the board to declare the occupation hazardous upon a proper showing (conceding that it had authority to do so), it would seem that if the occupation is to be so declared resort must be made to the legislature.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES MYERS, STARK, MATTHEWS and GALEN concur. *141