290 Mass. 393 | Mass. | 1935
This is an appeal by the insurer from a decree of the Superior Court awarding compensation to the employee in accordance with a decision of the Industrial Accident Board which affirmed and adopted the decision of the board member.
The board member made the following findings: The employee was on December. 29, 1933, in the employ of the Superior Laundry Company. He was required to deliver circulars from house to house, leaving them in letter boxes or halls in the district in which he was to work; and when this was finished he would go home. On the morning of December 29, 1933, he left the laundry of his employer in Cambridge and went to his territory in Arlington. The temperature was seventeen degrees below zero. He did
The board member further found that it is a matter of common knowledge that a person does not have any warning that he is freezing; that the employee because of his low mentality did not sense the severity of the weather and know that he should protect himself; and that the injury arose out of and in the course of the employment. The reviewing board upon the evidence and subject to the agreement of the parties relative to the employee’s return to work, affirmed and adopted the findings and decision of the board member.
The question before this court is whether the decision of the Industrial Accident Board can be sustained as rationally possible, on the evidence reported, under the law of this Commonwealth. Chisholm’s Case, 238 Mass. 412, 419. Beckford’s Case, 268 Mass. 221, 226. Cameron v. State Theatre Co. 256 Mass. 466.
It .is plain that at the time the employee received his injury he was acting in the course of his employment. The
It could have been found that the injury was sustained at twenty minutes to three, when the employee first noticed something wrong with his fingers. The injury was so apparent that it was noticed by a woman who gave him mittens to put on, at about three o’clock. His hands were then protected by the mittens until four o’clock when he stopped work, but they had been exposed to the cold for about six hours before he noticed the injury. When asked why he did not stop work earlier in the day if he felt his hands were too cold, he replied that he did not “feel bad enough to stop.”
It cannot be ruled that because the employee did not wear gloves he was guilty of such wilful misconduct as would bar him from compensation under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 27. Serious and wilful misconduct is neither negligence nor gross negligence. Nickerson’s Case, 218 Mass. 158, 160. Negligence is not a bar to recovery. Gilbert’s Case, 253 Mass. 538. The board member found that the failure of the employee to wear gloves or mittens “can properly be attributed to his lack of understanding.” He testified that he had not worn gloves for about thirty years. It cannot successfully be contended that there was such a voluntary exposure to danger not contemplated by the contract of employment that the employee was not acting within the scope of his employment. DeFilippo’s Case, 284 Mass. 531, 532.
In the opinion of a majority of the court the decision of the Industrial Accident Board that the injury arose out of and in the course of the employment was warranted. The case is governed by Ferrara’s Case, 269 Mass. 243, and cases there cited. So far as the decision in Warner v. Couchman, [1912] A. C. 35, cited in McNicol’s Case, 215 Mass. 497, is at variance with what is here decided we are not disposed to follow it.
Decree affirmed.