216 Wis. 238 | Wis. | 1934
Bernard Rutta, a seventeen-year-old son of the plaintiff, sustained fatal injury while in the employ of the defendant Lullabye Furniture Corporation, by being caught between a floor and an elevator in motion on the employer’s premises. In proceedings upon plaintiff’s application for
“That he was employed by the respondent in connection with the making of crates, and was instructed not to operate any power-driven appliance; that he was, in fact, operating the elevator in question at the time of his death, and apparently had operated it on one or two prior occasions; that, however, the applicant has not met the burden of proof in showing that the deceased operated the elevator with the knowledge or consent of the respondent, or of any of his superiors in the employment of the respondent.”
It is, of course, well established that “the burden of proving the facts essential to compensation is on the claimant.” Winter v. Industricd Comm. 205 Wis. 246, 237 N. W. 106. Consequently, to entitle appellant to treble compensation, it was essential for him to prove that, in addition to the existence of the facts essential to subject the employer to liability for primary compensation, the employee was, at the time of injury, “employed, required, suffered, or permitted” by the employer to run or manage the elevator, on which he was when injured. Manifestly, if in fact the son’s operation or use of that elevator was without the knowledge or consent of the employer, or the injured employee’s superiors in its employment, then the employer did not employ, require, suffer, or permit him to run or manage the elevator. Consequently,
It is true that the commission’s finding that “the applicant has not met the burden of proof” in that respect, is not, strictly speaking, a direct finding as to the ultimate essential fact that the operation was without the knowledge or consent of the employer. Whether the deceased was operating the elevator with, or whether he was operating it without, the knowledge or consent of his employer, was the ultimate fact in issue; and the proposition of whether the appellant had or had not met the burden of proof as to that issue was merely a matter which the commissioners had to consider and determine in the course of the mental process of arriving at the solution of that issue as to that ultimate fact. However, in this case, the commission’s failure to also state the consequence of its finding that the appellant has not met the burden of proof is not necessarily fatal. Under the circumstances, the legal effect of the commission’s finding that “the applicant has not met the burden of proof in showing that the deceased operated the elevator with the knowledge or consent of the respondent or any of his superiors in the employment of the respondent” is necessarily that, as far as appears under the evidence, there was no such knowledge or consent on the part of the employer. Consequently, the commission, having determined that the applicant has not met the burden which was on him of proving the existence of such knowledge or consent, should, and with the record in that state could only, have found that there was no such knowledge or consent. That would have been a finding directly as to that ultimate fact instead of merely indirectly — but nevertheless in legal effect — reaching that result by the mere finding that the
“If the evidence before the commission was such as to raise in the minds of the commission a legitimate doubt as to the existence of facts essential to compensation, it would be the duty of the commission to deny compensation, on the ground that the applicant did not sustain the burden of proving to the satisfaction of the commission that the facts were as he claimed them to be.”
As a review of the evidence discloses that the commission was warranted in finding that the appellant did not sustain the burden of proving that essential ultimate fact to the satisfaction of the commission, its finding is conclusive, even though there was some evidence which would have supported a finding to the contrary. Milwaukee v. Industrial Comm. 160 Wis. 238, 151 N. W. 247; Winter v. Industrial Comm., supra; Michigan Quartz Silica Co. v. Industrial Comm. 214 Wis. 289, 252 N. W. 682.
Appellant, however, contends that that result is obviated by reason of the fact that in stipulating, as basis for primary compensation, that “while performing service growing out of and incidental to his employment” Rutta accidentally sustained the fatal injury, the employer admitted that it was subject to the compensation act in respect to treble compensation, as well as primary compensation. That contention fails for two reasons: First, by its express terms that stipulation “pertains only to primary compensation.” By reason of that express limitation that stipulation was not binding as to treble compensation. Second, in view of the undisputed evidence that at the time of injury the deceased was getting excelsior for a coemployee who had no supervisory authority over the deceased, and that he had been forbidden by his employer to operate any power-driven appliance, the commission was not bound to find that, by reason of the provision in
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.