126 Me. 358 | Me. | 1927
An appeal by the city from the decree on the award under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (1919 Laws, Chap; 238 as amended) to the widow of the Lewiston policeman whose death resulted from a firearm wound.
Wallace J. Moriarty, a special patrolman in Lewiston, was found dying in a toilet room in a railroad station at a terminus of his beat, soon after beginning duty on September 11, 1925. ^-s . ..y¡
When found in the toilet, he was sitting on the floor, his back against the fastened door. He had been shot in the left side of his neck. Beside him was his revolver; if any chamber in the revolver were empty does not appear.
The bullet in its course involved the upper part of the man’s chest, lanced his windpipe, plowed through the left collar bone, and fractured the first two ribs on Mr. Moriarty’s right side. Two days later he died.
The principal duty of police officers, viz., the preservation of the public peace within certain territorial limits, is a matter of public concern, and hence policemen are properly designated as state or pubhc officers.
It is usual for police officers to be appointed by cities and towns, or by designated officials in cities or towns, in 'virtue of delegation of power by the State; but the power to appoint can be entrusted to any other political agency.
Police officers find their authority in the statute book. In executing authority, policemen are free from control by the appointing power, notwithstanding the municipalities in which they serve are required to pay them.
Were there no more to be noticed, it would be clear that police officers (flight not be regarded as bearing a contractual relation to the city or town wherein it is for them to discharge duty.
But in relevancy to this case there is more to be noticed. The Workmen’s Compensation Law provides that policemen shall be counted employees. This is the salient provision of the statute:
A dependent, and the widow in this cause is conclusively presumed to be a dependent, stands in the Stead of the dead employee.
It has been argued at the bar, and rightly enough, that the statute piuts policemen into two distinct classes: One, that of state policemen, e. g., highway police, who are appointed by a state official, in the general acceptance of that expression, and the range of whose authorization is not restricted to a city or a town; and, second, policemen appointed by other officials, technically styled public officials, but popularly spoken of as municipal or local officials, as mayors, or other city officers, or selectmen in towns.
Further argument is that, as the now deceased policeman was not appointed by officials who themselves had been elected or appointed in and by Lewiston, but was appointed by officers appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, the policeman became and was an employee of the State of Maine. The argument falls short of convincing force.
“The police force of the city of Lewiston” is chosen by a legislatively created commission. And the Legislature has decided this were good for Lewiston. P. & S. L. 1917, chap. 37 ; 1919, chap. 17.
The legislative creation was a new and-superseding political agency. Thereby municipal authority in Lewiston was shorn of the police-appointing prerogative. A board of police commissioners was named and organized. The province of the board, as defined by the Legislature, was to establish and appoint the police force of the city of Lewiston, with all the powers that the mayor, the municipal officers, or the city council of Lewiston had at the time of the legislation.
Upon his appointment, it was for the patrolman who now is dead, to take the same- constitutionally defined oaths, and to enforce the same laws and preserve the same peace within the same limits, as would have been the case had his appointment been by local officials in Lewis-ton. And his pay was from the same city treasury.
There are only five things that the printed words on the pages of the record, as those, words have been illumined by the arguments of counsel, justify this opinion in saying by way of conclusion.
First, that, within the purview of the compensation act, the death of Wallace J. Moriarty was caused by an accident, was determined by the Industrial Commission member, and the decision of that mixed question of law and fact has been accepted by the city of Lewiston, as final.
Second, it cannot be said as a matter of law that Mr. Moriarty wilfully intended to bring about the injury which caused his death.
Third, love of life is presumed. Men naturally heed the instinct of self-preservation. The presumption of the law is against self-murder. The presumption which prevails that, until the contrary is established, it will be assumed that injury was not self-inflicted, is entitled to probative force. Westman's Case, 118 Maine 133. A presumption serves in the place of evidence, until prima facie evidence is adduced by the opposite party. Of suicide the evidence had not proof in the estimate of the commissioner.
Fourth, the finding that the death of the man resulted from an accident, between which and the man’s employment there was causative connection, had sufficing legal foundation.
Fifth, and so had thé finding that the injury was experienced in the course of employment.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Decree below affirmed.