185 Wis. 428 | Wis. | 1925
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court for Dane county affirming an award of the Industrial Commission. It appears that on the 29th day of August, 1922, Susan Week was working in a sash and blind factory as the employee of the Morgan Company. While putting waste through a cut-off saw on that day she sustained the injury which resulted in her death. The Industrial Commission found that at the time of the injury she was performing services growing out of and incidental to her employment, and made an award to her dependents.
Wilke testified that he had orders to keep the girls away from the saws, that is, to prevent them from operating the . saws. But it does not appear that the deceased employee knew that Wilke had such orders, nor does it appear that she had any reason to regard this statement of Mr. Wilke as an authoritative order from her employer or anything more than a mere caution or warning. Her injuries were sustained while putting the waste material through that saw. While the direct testimony of the superintendent is to the effect that the deceased was employed as a helper to take away from a self-setting rip-saw, there are many circumstances to indicate that as a matter of fact she was employed to work generally in this factory. The same superintendent testified concerning her instructions: “The only instructions she had,' she was taken to the foreman with instructions what she was to do. Q. And the foreman would instruct her from day to day and from time to time? A. Yes, sir.” This would seem to indicate that she was hired to do whatever the foreman told her to do. It further appears that she was engaged at taking away from the rip-saw not more than half of her time. It also appears that when there was no work to do in taking away from the rip-saw she made. application to the foreman for instructions. Upon the day in question she made application to the assistant foreman and he told her to sweep up. He also testified that when she got through sweeping up he wanted her to unload a couple of loads of blind rails. This would indicate that the work which she was expected to do pursuant to her employment'was quite general.
There is evidence that it was customary to put the waste material which was swept up from the floor through the cutting machine. While there is testimony to the effect that
The facts of this case clearly distinguish it from Radtke Bros. & Korsch Co. v. Rutzinski, 174 Wis. 212, 183 N. W. 168, where a boy fourteen years of age sustained injuries while working at a paper cutter at which he had been forbidden to work, preparing a tablet for his own use. Here the employee was hired to work generally in the factory, she had not been forbidden by the employer to operate the saw, and while operating it she was furthering the interest of her employer. The award of the Industrial Commission was properly affirmed by the circuit court.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.