130 A. 70 | Conn. | 1925
The Superior Court reserved for our advice the appeal from the compensation commissioner of the fourth district upon the finding of facts made by the commissioner as follows: The Pardy Construction Company is a general building contractor having its principal office in Bridgeport and doing business in Connecticut and in other States. Early in 1924, it secured the contract for the building of a parochial school in Webster, Massachusetts, and started this work in March, 1924. It, in Bridgeport, gave plaintiff the option of working on this job at an increase of twenty cents an hour over his ordinary pay of seventy cents. He accepted, in Bridgeport, and worked on the job as foreman of the laborers from the beginning of the job to the early part of August when he had a difference with the superintendent who told him to get off the job. This he did and returned to Bridgeport. The superintendent laid him off temporarily as a disciplinary measure, but did not discharge him. Within an hour or two after Pettiti left the job the superintendent made an effort to get him back. Within two or three days Pettiti got a fellow employee to intercede with the superintendent to take him back, which the superintendent did with the understanding that he would obey orders in the future. Pettiti continued to work until his death. When the weather became cold the superintendent made an arrangement with him to look after the boilers and keep the fires burning for which he was to receive extra pay. While taking care of the furnace fires he met with an accident as a result of which he subsequently *104 died. The defendant employer carried compensation insurance on its employees in Connecticut with the Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, and on its employees in Massachusetts with the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company.
The commissioner found that the accident which resulted in Pettiti's death arose out of and in the course of his employment and adjudged that respondents pay the claimant a stated award. The finding comprises both the finding of facts and a memorandum of opinion. This violates our repeated instruction. The finding and award should conform to the finding of facts in a case tried to the court in an appeal from a Superior Court judgment. It should contain the recital of facts found, the conclusions reached by the commissioner upon these subordinate facts, the claims of law made by the appellant, the rulings made thereon, and the judgment rendered. The commissioner may also file a memorandum containing the reasons for his conclusions and judgment.
The appeal is based upon three grounds. We take them up in the order of appellant's brief.
Claim 1: That the contract of employment in the course of which Pettiti was injured was made in Massachusetts, since his original contract to work on the Webster job was terminated in August, 1924, and five days later he was re-employed under a new contract of employment which was made in Massachusetts. The claim is predicated upon the fact that Pettiti was discharged in August. The finding is that he was temporarily laid off, that is, suspended, as a disciplinary measure by the superintendent, and as the finding clearly shows with the intention of continuing him in his work on the job. The claim is further predicated upon the fact that the new contract was made in Massachusetts. That is an assumption which the *105 record does not sustain. If there was a new contract it was not completed until its acceptance by Pettiti and that was given in Bridgeport. There was no new contract made in August; the contract temporarily suspended was continued.
Claim 2: That the employment of tending the boilers was a new contract, and independent of Pettiti's contract as foreman of the laborers, and was made in Massachusetts in the fall of 1924. If this was a new contract, appellant's claim as to the place of its making necessarily follows. It cannot be held to be a new contract. There was only one contract of employment, and a change of the work done, or the compensation paid the employee, would not change the relation existing between this employer and employee. The doing of additional work for increased pay was an incident of the contract of employment. To hold otherwise might, in some cases, where the day's work was distributed among several lines of work, create as many different contracts of employment, and with every new piece of work outside the particular work for which the employee was employed a new contract would be formed. The work done at one time would be under the Connecticut Compensation Act, while just succeeding its performance, the next work done would be under another State Compensation Act. The result would be a situation intolerable to both employer and employee. Neither employer nor employee intended the formation of a new contract with each change in the character of the work. The commissioner has found that Pettiti was hired to take orders from the superintendent, and pursuant to this he was ordered to take care of the boilers. The work done upon the boilers, in view of this finding, may well be held to fairly come within the original contract of employment. *106
Claim 3: That the Connecticut Workmen's Compensation Act does not apply because the contract of employment was made with distinct and sole reference to employment in Massachusetts. The contract of employment with Pettiti was made in Connecticut, the specific and sole subject of that contract being performed in Massachusetts. The facts found are identical with those in Banks v. Howlett Co.,
We held in Kennerson v. Thames Towboat Co.,
In Hopkins v. Matchless Metal Polish Co.,
In explaining and distinguishing Banks v. HowlettCo., supra, we point out that it is an exception to the rule announced in the Kennerson and Douthwright
cases and that further consideration of this subject, *108
together with the almost universal course of decision in other jurisdictions having a Compensation Act of the same contractual kind and construed as having extraterritorial effect like ours, has satisfied us that this exception to our rule should be confined to the precise point decided in that case. Hopkins v. MatchlessMetal Polish Co., supra, differed in its facts fromBanks v. Howlett Co. in that the contract of employment made in New Jersey contemplated that the principal services of the employee should be rendered in Connecticut, but that he should also render services in New York and Massachusetts. In accordance with the doctrine we quote, we held that the Compensation Act of New Jersey, contractual in character, controlled, and that the compensation commissioner of this State had no jurisdiction. Reference to the cases cited in notes to State ex rel. Chambers v. DistrictCourt, 3 A. L. R. 1351 (
The Superior Court is advised to enter its judgment dismissing the appeal and sustaining the award of the Commissioner in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.