7 A.2d 534 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1939
Argued April 10, 1939. These two workmen's compensation cases growing out of the same accident and involving the same questions were argued together and will be disposed of in one opinion.
The claimants, Harry M. Ronan and Carl A. Anderson, sustained injuries in falling off a scaffold upon which they were standing while painting a rented dwelling house owned by LeRoy C. Eddy and Everett H. Eddy, his brother, who inherited this property from their mother, Cornelia E. Eddy, who died intestate.
LeRoy C. Eddy is an attorney-at-law and his brother is in the insurance business. They own, jointly, seven properties, consisting of four double houses, a triple house, a garage with apartment overhead, and a dwelling house which they occupy. The foregoing premises had been owned either individually by Cornelia E. Eddy or jointly with LeRoy C. Eddy and at her death they became vested, by virtue of the intestate laws, in her two sons. By agreement, there was no division of the properties. They remained in, and were managed and *438 supervised as belonging to, the estate of Cornelia E. Eddy. Compensation insurance in the name of "Cornelia E. Eddy Estate, L.C. Eddy, Administrator," was issued by the insurance carrier, which has intervened as a party defendant in these cases.
LeRoy C. Eddy testified that the Cornelia E. Eddy Estate is in the business of renting the properties and getting revenues therefrom. We will assume, therefore, for the purpose of these cases, that that is the business of the defendant. LeRoy C. Eddy hired the claimants to paint by the day, so that their employment could have been terminated at any time. He exercised supervision over the work, designated what was to be done, but did not control the manner of doing it. He supplied the materials but most of the brushes and tools were furnished by the claimants. Anderson was in Eddy's employ during the summers of 1935 and 1936, but had not worked for him in 1937 prior to the date of the accident. Ronan was employed by Eddy in May, 1937, and had continued to work for him "almost consecutively" from that time until the accident.
The referee and the board granted compensation for total disability, and their action was sustained by the learned court below. These appeals were taken from the judgments entered on the awards.
The question before us is whether the work in which the employees were engaged when injured was casual in character and not in the regular course of the business of the employer.
The definition of "employe" in section 104 of the Workmen's Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, amended June 4, 1937, P.L. 1552 (
The claimants' employment had no direct relation to *439
the renting of houses; it was but incidental thereto and occasional, with no definite duration. We are constrained to conclude that their employment was casual: Callihan v.Montgomery,
In Blake v. Wilson,
So, here, painting may be necessary periodically, but it is not connected with, nor does it constitute a part of, the regular course of defendant's business. It was held in Holbrook v.Olympia Hotel Co. (Mich.),
In Dunlap v. Paradise Camp,
A careful consideration of this record leads us to the conclusion that the evidence adduced shows that the employment was casual and not in the regular course of defendant's business, and therefore does not support an award.
Judgment in each appeal is reversed.