25 N.J. Misc. 149 | New Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau | 1947
A formal petition was filed in the above-entitled matter claiming compensation by virtue of the provisions of R. S. 34:15, et seq. An answer was duly filed by the respondent. The matter came on for hearing before this court at Newark, New Jersey, on the 8th clay of January, 1947.
At the start of trial it was stipulated and agreed by and between counsel that the court should first determine the question of liability before any witnesses were brought in to testify on the question of causal relationship between the accident and the death of decedent. Petitioner claimed that the accident arose out of and in the course of decedent’s employment, which the respondent denied. There was little dispute on the factual situation at the close of trial on the liability phase of the case. The main dispute was as to whether the facts showed a compensable case under our law.
The respondent, a public utility corporation, owned a gas plant and office at 1025 McCarter Highway, Newark, New
Some employees of the gas plant had voluntarily formed an ■athletic and social “association” among themselves which, among other things, participated in sports activities with ■other Publie Service units. This group of employees financed itself from membership dues, purchased equipment with no financial aid from the employer and elected its own officers free from any control by the respondent. Theberge, who was forty-seven years of age and weighed over 200 pounds, was not a member of the team already selected by the employees to represent them in baseball games during the coming summer season. The day of the accident was only the second or third time the employees had played ball in the spring of 1946, and Mr. Hopkins, the superintendent of respondent, testified that he did not know the employees played hall in the garage yard in 1946, or any year prior thereto, although he had seen them playing in the city park previously mentioned in past years. Other employees testified that in a prior year the glass top on the gasoline pump and several windows in an adjacent building had been broken and the employees had been told to stop playing in the garage yard. ‘There was a rest and recreation room in a building some distance from the auto parking yard where employees could eat and rest and seek recreation during the lunch period and ■other non-working hours. This room was not connected with •or any part of the auto parking yard where the accident occurred. The room was furnished for recreational purposes by equipment furnished and supplied by the employees’ athletic and social club, and whether the men spent any time there was optional with themselves. The rest and recreation
The testimony makes it quite clear that the ballplaying and not the duties connected with Theberge’s job was the cause of the accident. The ballplaying was an independent act on his leisure time, having no connection with his work. There is no proof that the employer encouraged him to play ball and it was not a requirement of his job. The testimony and facts of the case indicate that it was spring and some of the men started playing baseball, and on the second or third time of playing in 1946, the accident occurred. This is regrettable, but it does not mean the respondent is liable under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
In Conklin v. Brighton Mills, Inc., 105 N. J. L. 386; 144 Atl. Rep. 815, the Court of Errors and Appeals held:
“Manifestly the mere happening of this accident upon the premises of the defendant, caused by a person not engaged in the prosecution of the master’s work, and at a time when the servant was free to indulge his spare time for diversion or other personal conduct, free from the master’s supervision, could impose no liability upon the master. * * *”
In Levengood v. New York Shipbuilding Corp., 24 N. J. Mis. R. 273; 48 Atl. Rep. (2d) 570, a petitioner was denied compensation against his employer where he was in his employer’s parking lot changing a tire on his own car after working hours, the court holding that at the time of injury he had embarked on a personal venture.
The petitioner cited among other cases the case of Conklin v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 226 Mo. App. 309; 41 S. W. Rep. (2d) 608, which case involved injuries received in an employees’ leisure time baseball game, as authority for holding the accident in this ease compensable. This Conklin case was limited to its own facts and distinguished by the same court that, decided it in Dunnaway v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp. et al., 227 Mo. App. 1211; 61 S. W. Rep.
In Porowski v. American Can Co., 15 N. J. Mis. R. 316; 191 Atl. Rep. 296, I held that the petitioner in that case involving ballplaying had not sustained the burden of proving his injury due to an accident arising ont of and in the course of employment, and dismissed the petition. To my knowledge the Porowski case has been followed several times since by trial courts in denying compensation to employees who suffered injuries while playing baseball in their nonworking hours when the employer obtained no advantage because o£ the ballplaying.
I do find and determine from the testimony that the petitioner’s decedent was engaged in ballplaying for his own amusement during his leisure time on April 30th, 1946. During this period he was not paid by the respondent and was free to spend the noon lunch period on or off the premises as he pleased. He chose to play ball for his own amusement. The ballplaying indulged in was not sponsored or ordered by the respondent company. The equipment was provided by the players themselves. The ball playing was the motive for decedent’s movement at the time of his injury and not the duties of his job as a gas regulator man. The risk of injury and the injury itself in this case arose out of the ballplaying and not the decedent’s duties in connection with his job. The respondent is a public utility, and the ballplaying by decedent was not shown to have any connection with respondent’s business. The employer provided a rest and recreation room for the employees who wanted to stay around the premises during their lunch period, and when Theberge started playing ball on asphalt during his leisnre time, he placed himself in a dangerous position by his own choice.
Therefore, considering all the evidence and the law applicable thereto, I find that the petitioner has failed to sustain
It is, therefore, on this 3d day of February, 1947, ordered that this claim petition be and the same is hereby dismissed-
John C. Wbgnbk,
Deputy Commissioner.