72 P.2d 1102 | Colo. | 1937
THIS cause is before us on writ of error to reverse a judgment of the district court sustaining the finding of the Industrial Commission, and an award based thereon, that John Nixon sustained accidental injuries while performing services arising out of and in the course of his employment by the O. P. Skaggs Company, a corporation. The O. P. Skaggs Company and the American Mutual Liability Insurance Company, a corporation, are plaintiffs in error and will be designated as the Skaggs company and insurer, respectively. The Industrial Commission and John C. Nixon, defendants in error, will be herein mentioned as the commission and claimant. The multitude of assignments of error, ninety-two in number, covering twenty-one typewritten pages fairly present the question of whether the evidence is sufficient to support the commission's finding and award.
[1] This case was before us on a former occasion and the decision previously rendered (Skaggs Co. v.Nixon,
The evidence discloses that Nixon was employed by the Skaggs company to render services, legal in *205 character, and also perform work that might be classed as executive in its nature, not requiring legal training. Such work involved advice as to business policies and methods to be adopted and pursued. It was stipulated in the contract of employment that claimant was to be paid $50 a month for his services. Such business as could be transacted by him in or from his law office, maintained in Greeley, was to be done there. Such as required his presence in Denver was to be performed in Denver and he was to come to the latter city without additional compensation or expense to the Skaggs company. He was to give the company the first call on his time and the evidence discloses that he did so. In December, 1931, claimant was requested to come to Denver for a conference and in response to that request he traveled there by automobile solely for that purpose and attended to no other business. On this occasion he was given two important contracts by O. P. Skaggs, the president of the company, to take with him to Greeley and upon which he was to render an opinion after he had examined them. As he was returning to Greeley, and near Brighton, he had an automobile accident resulting in the injuries and disability for which compensation was awarded.
[2] We are of the opinion that the accident arose out of and in the course of claimant's employment, and while so holding, are cognizant of the general rule stated inIndustrial Commission v. Anderson,
If the accident occurs while the employee is doing something which the employer has directed and under the contract of employment may require the employee to do, we think that while the employee is doing it he fairly may be said to be acting in the course of his employment, and if he is doing the thing directed to be done, as required, or, if the manner of its doing is not specified, in a manner that is within the limits of a reasonable discretion on the part of the employee, then a resulting accident arises out of the employment and fairly may be said to be the result of a hazard incident to it. In Security StateBank of Sterling v. Propst,
The employment in the case here under consideration was based on a mutual recognition of the fact that claimant was located at Greeley. It impliedly recognized that such of his work as was done in Denver required him to come from Greeley to Denver. While it was not specified that he should come by automobile, under modern conditions his doing so was the adoption of a reasonable mode of transportation. We held in Comstock v. Bivens,
We think in this case sufficient special circumstances appear to take it out of the general rule, that injuries sustained in going to or from work carried on at a special place and within specified hours are not compensable, as not arising out of and in the course of the employment. The exception to the rule is recognized in Industrial Commissionv. Anderson, supra. The instant case is analogous to one in which an employer directs an employee to leave one place during working hours and go to another place on the same job and while complying with such direction he is injured. If it be said that the injury here occurred on the return from carrying out the employer's orders, the answer is that the return was a necessary incident to a compliance with the order to come, and that the hazards of both coming and returning are alike incident to a compliance with the employer's directions. InComstock v. Bivens, supra, we said: "When Comstock *208 delivered the mail to the postmistress on the evening of the day when the accident occurred he could not indefinitely leave his automobile in the public highway or make of the same a place of storage. It was necessary for him to put it in his garage or some place on his own or rented premises. While there is no direct evidence as to what Comstock's intentions were in driving from the post office to his home, his course was what he usually pursued after delivering the mail. He was found lying near the car and had taken the rifle from the automobile in the place where he usually carried it on his trips and apparently intended to put it away in his house when it was discharged. The car being the instrument or facility that he used in performing his work of carrying the mail, it is a fair inference from the testimony that he was preparing to store, or was engaged in storing, his automobile for the night at the time the accident occurred. This is analogous to what occurs, for example, when a carpenter, who quits work at the end of the day on a house which he is building, goes across a street or to some other nearby place to store his tools for the night. We think that Comstock was doing the work for which he was employed when this accident occurred and it arose out of and in the course of his employment."
In Industrial Commission v. Pueblo Auto Co.,
In a lightning case, Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Industrial *209 Commission,
In London Co. v. McCoy,
In the light of the foregoing authorities we are of the opinion that the evidence before the commission is sufficient to support its finding that the accident causing claimant's injuries arose out of and in the course of his employment. We are bound by such finding. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BOUCK not participating. *210