1. The appellee-claimant in this workmen’s compensation case worked six days a week as a retail
2. The evidence supports the finding of fact of the administrative law judge that "claimant’s part time job and her full time job involved handling money, giving receipts, keeping records, and meeting the public on behalf of her employers. Although the jobs are not exact in every detail I find they are sufficiently similar in nature [to constitute] concurrent similar employment.”
St. Paul-Mercury Indem. Co. v. Idov,
3. Lastly, it is contended that even though this court finds the two jobs were both concurrent and similar in nature, the wages should not be added together as a base for computation of benefits because the full time job as retail sales clerk was not covered under workmen’s compensation, although the hospital work during which the claimant was injured was in fact covered. It is true that the department store is not insured and pays nothing into the fund so that, looked at alone from the standpoint of the employer, the position might be sustainable. On the other hand, the accident takes from the employee his earning power in both fields of employment. "The great object or theory of the workmen’s compensation laws is to shift the burden of economic loss, entailed by personal injuries to workmen necessarily accompanying modern industrial operations, from the employee to the industry, in order that it may ultimately be borne by the consumer as a part of the necessary cost of production, rather than by the one particular establishment in which the employee was working while injured.”
Continental Cas. Co. v.
Haynie,
Judgment affirmed.
