106 A. 255 | Md. | 1919
The appellee's son was fatally injured by being thrown against a post as he was driving a wagon loaded with canned tomatoes out of the packing factory of his employer. The only question to be decided on this appeal is whether he was a casual employe within the meaning of the Maryland Workmen's Compensation Act which excepts "casual employes" from its provisions. Code, Art. 101, sec. 63, par. 3.
The injured man, who was a farmer and teamster, had been employed to do hauling for the factory whenever he was needed for that service. His employer testified: "He was engaged to me early in the canning season to work for me at such times as I might need him, and he promised to help me out at all such times as I might call upon him, and he did so, the day of the accident being the last of the work he had for the season." To the question: "Was there no separate engagement or contract of hiring for the work he was doing on the day of the accident?" The employer replied: "Nothing more than just to tell him to come; the same wages paid all the time, always during the season the same wages." Under this general engagement the teamster who was injured had been called upon repeatedly for hauling service in the course of the packing season, being paid at the uniform rate of three dollars per day when he hauled with his own team, and one dollar and a half per day when a factory team was used.
The Workmen's Compensation Act of this State does not define the term "casual" as therein used to describe one of the classes of employees to whom the Act is not intended to apply. It is a purely relative term and, in the absence of a statutory definition, its application should be determined in each case according to the particular facts presented. The Act defines an "employe" to be "a person who is engaged in an extra-hazardous employment in the service of an employer carrying on or conducting the same upon the premises or at a plant, or in the course of his employment away from the plant of his employer." There can be no dispute as to the fact that *135 the appellee's son was an "employe," within the definition of the Act, at the time he was injured, but it is contended that his employment was so irregular that it should be characterized as only casual, within the meaning of the Act, and therefore expressly excluded from its operation.
The question whether an employment is casual must be determined with principal reference to the scope and purpose of the hiring rather than with sole regard to the duration and regularity of the service. One who enters into a contract of employment for an entire season is not a casual employe merely because he may be required to work for only short and irregular periods. When there is a continuing engagement to serve the employer in his business at such times as the particular and essential service may be needed, the employment is not "casual" according to any of the judicial definitions of that term. In this case the service required and rendered was occasional, but it was in pursuance of an engagement covering the whole of the working season at the employer's plant.
In Sabella v. Brazileiro,
The work in which the appellee's son was engaged when he received the injury which caused his death was a necessary part of his employer's business. It was a service rendered under an employment which was not limited to the hauling then in progress, but applied to every recurring occasion for such assistance during the whole of one of the annual productive periods of the employer's enterprise. Upon the facts of the case we agree with the ruling of the Court below, that the employment was not casual within the meaning of the statute, and that the appellee is entitled to compensation under its terms.
Order affirmed, with costs and case remanded. *137