119 Neb. 698 | Neb. | 1930
This action arises under the workmen’s compensation law. Comp. St. 1922, secs. 3024 to 3084, inclusive, as amended. Appellee, Gaugenbaugh, was an employee of the Skelly Oil Company. He was hired in Omaha under a written contract of employment which was signed at the office of the Skelly Oil Company in that city. He selected as his territory the southwestern part of Iowa. He went out from Omaha to the territory during the week, returning on Saturday and Sunday, there attending meetings of instruction which were held under direction of the zone manager and for the promotion of the business in which he was engaged. A portion of his work, it appears, was actually performed in Omaha. He also did work in Nebraska for the company under this employment at Blair, Herman, Lincoln, and South Sioux City. His principal duties as a salesman, however, were transacted in Iowa, but the establishment maintained in the city of Omaha by the Skelly Oil Company constituted the base of operation, where its merchandise was stored, worked over, repaired, and shipped! from, and through which the territory contiguous thereto-, including plaintiff’s Iowa territory, was actually served and supplied. In the course of this employment as a salesman at Harlan, Iowa, which was under the immediate direction and control of the company officials at Omaha, to whom the employee made daily reports,, on the 20th day of May, 1929, while the employee, in the course of his duties, was lifting on a stove assisting in the installation of a skelgas outfit, he sustained an accidental injury, a strain, the result of which immediately appeared in the form of a hemorrhage in his right groin and leg. The employee upon the same day following was treated by an
To defeat the claim for compensation it was alleged in the district court that the disabilities of appellee were not caused nor contributed to- by any accident, but were due wholly to purpura which was in truth an occupational disease; second, that no notice either oral or written of injury was given as- prescribed by section 3056, Comp. St. 1922.
First, it isi the theory -of the defendant oil company that plaintiff’s condition is due to purpura and in no manner due to his duties- as an employee of the oil company. On the other hand, the employee’s contention is that the inception of the condition was due to inhalations by the employee of skelgas during the course of his employment; that this was> induced by the representations of the oil company to its agents and its patrons that the product was wholly harmless and contained no poisonous substances whatsoever -and could be safely inhaled; that, relying thereon, as part of the demonstrations made by plaintiff as salesman for the defendant oil company, he from time to time, believing the representations -made to be true and that skelgas was in truth and in fact wholly harmless, inhaled the same; that, as a result of the inhalations thus made, the poisonous effects of the gas produced an “unexpected and unforeseen event happening suddenly and violently, with or without human fault, and producing * * * objective symptoms of an injury” (Comp. St. 1922, sec. 3075) by causing a state of purpura to exist in plaintiff’s circulatory system, and due to the condition thus created
The appellant here has cited1 a large number of English
The employer also contends that employee in this case was not under the terms of the Nebraska compensation act. In view of the record as an entirety there can be no question upon this point. It plainly appears that the work of the employee in this case was an incident to an industry which was substantially carried on at Omaha, Nebraska. At that point was created what might be termed a base for operations and constituted in truth and in fact an essential industry as contemplated by our compensation statute. Bradtmiller v. Liquid Carbonic Co., 173 Minn. 481.
Affirmed.