Thе employee, who was in the general employ of the Framingham Ice Company (hereinafter called the ice company), was injured while at work in the yard of the Framingham coal company (hereinаfter called the coal company). Both companies were insured under the workmen’s compensation act. The Industrial Accident Board awarded compensation against the insurer of the ice company. The only question before us on this appeal is, whether Scribner, at the time of his injury, was an employee of the ice company within the meaning of the workmen’s compensation act.
The ice company let to the coal company a pair of horses, wagon and driver. This happened frequently; and on one occasion under this arrangement Scribner worked for the coal company twо or three months. He received his wages from the ice company.
“In determining whether, in a particular act, he is the servant of his original master or the person to whom he has been furnished, the general test is whether the act is done in business of which the person is in control as a proprietor, so that he can at any time stop it or continue it, and determine the way in which it shall be done, not merely in reference to the result to be reached, but in reference to the method of reaching the result.” Shepard v. Jacobs,
Pigeon’s Case,
In Clancy’s Case,
The record shows that the coal company was a subscriber. The employee’s remedy under the workmen’s compensation act was against the insurer of this company, by whom he was employed, and not agаinst the insurer, of the ice company.
This well established principle of the common law, which holds that an employee who is lent to a special employer as distinguished from his general employer, and who assents to the change of employment, becomes the servant of the employer to whom he is lent, applies as well to cases arising under the workmen’s compensation act as to those at common law. The English workmen’s compensation act, St. 6 Edw. VII, c. 58, § 13, in defining the word “employer” enacts, “where the services of a workman are temporarily lent or let on hire to another person by the person with whom thе workman has entered into a contract of service . . . the latter shall, for the purposes of this act, be deemed to continue to be the employer of the workman whilst he is working for that other person.” This statute was considered by the commission on compensation for industrial accidents, and in the “Report of the Massachusetts Commission on Compensation for Industrial Accidents” in its “Commentary on the Massachusetts Law” (рages 46, 47, 48, 52, 53) reference is made to the English act and to the English decisions, showing that these were called to the attention of the Legislature. See McNicol’s Case,
To decide, as we are now urged to do, that this rule has no application to proceedings under the workmen’s compensation act, would in many cases deprivе the injured employee of the benefits which the act was intended to give him, and which can be enforced only by reliance on the common law rule.
In the first section of the workmen’s compensation act it is provided that, if the employer is not a subscriber, the injured employee can recover in an action at law by establishing the negligence of the employer. If such an employee, who is lent to an employer and is injured by reason of this employer’s negligence, remains the employee of the general employer, it would be difficult if not impossible for him to avail himself of the right given him under this section; for, if injured while engaged in thе business of the special employer, under ordinary circumstances it could not be said that the negligence of the general employer caused his injury. His remedy under this section is against the person who is in fact his еmployer. To abandon the common law rule would make this important section ineffective in many, if not all, of the cases where the employee is injured while temporarily in the employ of a special employer.
Under § 3 of Part II of the workmen’s compensation [act, if an employee is injured by the serious and wilful misconduct of a subscriber, or of any person regularly entrusted with and exercising the powers of superintendence, he can recover double compensation. The employee’s rights under this section are based on the relation of master and servant, and he can recover only from his employer. If we should decide that an employee working for a special employer — notwithstanding his consent to the change —■ and injured while so employed remained the servant of the general employer, then thе employee could not recover the additional compensation provided for in this section unless it could be said that he was injured by the serious and wilful misconduct of the general employer.
In the case at bar, if Scribner was an employee of the ice company and was injured by the serious and wilful misconduct of the coal company, he could not claim the double compensation
There might also be obstacles in the way of enforcing the penalty (Part III, § 18) where the employer is required to report all injuries received by employees in the course of their employment, if it were held that an employee working for a special employer and engaged in his businеss, was not employed by him, but remained the employee of his general employer. In order to safeguard fully the rights of all parties, the well recognized common law rule should prevail in the application of the workmen’s compensation act; and the one who is in fact the employer should be held for the consequences of his own neglect.
In Arnett v. Hayes Wheel Co.
In Pigeon’s Case and in Clancy’s Case, supra, the common law rule appears to have been assumed. See King’s Case,
It follows that the decree must be reversed and a decree entered in favor of the insurer.
So ordered..
