139 Minn. 30 | Minn. | 1917
On April 3, 1916, Robert G. Raekman was employed by the Albert Dickinson Company loading and unloading bags into and from box cars. He quit at 9:03 p. m. He lived some distance away. It took 20 minutes or longer to go on a street car from his place of work to his home. He arrived home at about 9:30 p. m. When he arrived home he had a scratch on one hand. It was about half an inch long and not very deep but the skin was “torn quite badly” and it had been “bleeding quite badly.” He had wrapped it in a piece of handkerchief. This was bloody. The blood was hard. Witnesses say it looked as though the scratch was about two hours old. Deceased had no scratch when he left home in the morning.
The trial court found that the death of deceased resulted from this scratch and that the injury arose out of and in the course of his employment. The principal question in the case is, whether the evidence sustains this finding.
The evidence is quite satisfactory that the blood poisoning and the ensuing death were the result of the scratch. The medical testimony is to that effect and the sequence of events leaves very little doubt on that point.
That the scratch was received while he was engaged in his employment is not so clear. There was no direct evidence that the scratch was so received. We think, however, the evidence is sufficient. The fact -that deceased had no scratch when he left home in the morning and had one when he came home from work at night; that he must have come home immediately, for he was home within half an hour of the time he quit work; that the scratch had blood upon it which had hardened, indicating that the scratch had been received "earlier than the time he quit work; that it was such a scratch as he was not likely to receive on a trip from his work to his home, and such a scratch as he might well have received while at work, these facts taken in connection with the letter above quoted, which is of some force as an admission, were such that the court might infer that the scratch was received while deceased was in the course of his usual work and that it 'arose out of it.
Fleet v. B. H. Johnson & Sons, 1913 W. C. & Ins. R. 149, was a similar case and a similar result was reached; Blaess v. Dolph (Mich.) 161 N. W. 885, was not dissimilar.
Order affirmed.