111 A. 769 | Md. | 1920
The Thistle Mills, Incorporated, appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court of Baltimore City affirming an award of the State Industrial Accident Commission in favor of the widow of John P. Lynch, who was fatally injured while driving an autobus belonging to the appellant and intended for the transportation of its employees. In opposition to the award it is contended that Lynch was employed to operate the autobus only for the purpose just mentioned, and that on the occasion of the accident he was not engaged in that service, and therefore his injury did not arise "out of and in the course of the employment" within the terms of the Workmen's Compensation Law. This theory was presented at the trial below in the form of prayers which were rejected and which are set forth in the only bill of exceptions in the record. No evidence was offered upon any controverted issue in addition to that produced before the State Industrial Accident Commission.
The accident occurred at night while the autobus was being used by Lynch for the purpose of taking home a musician who had been engaged by the appellant to train a band which its employees had organized. As the autobus was being driven toward a railroad crossing from a road parallel with the track, it collided with the end of a lowered safety gate, and Lynch sustained the injury from which he shortly afterwards died.
When the appellant employed the band-instructor, it was agreed that he should be furnished transportation to his home on the occasions of his visits to the plant in that capacity. It was his custom to instruct the band every Thursday night, *120 but the visit from which he was returning at the time of the accident was on Friday night and was the second one in that week. He had come on that occasion for the purpose of assisting the band at a picnic which was being held on the appellant's grounds. According to his testimony, he was not limited to one visit a week under the terms of his engagement. He was paid by the appellant for the visit made on the night of the accident. The proof shows that it was part of Lynch's duty to take the bandmaster home in the autobus. The appellant's manager testified that nothing was said to Lynch about the use of the car on the night of the accident, but that he "accepted it" as a part of the duty to which he had been assigned. In its report of the accident to the State Industrial Accident Commission, the appellant stated that Lynch was injured in the course of his employment. The contention to the contrary is based upon the theory that the bandmaster was in fact employed to serve on a single night each week, at which time alone it was Lynch's duty to take him home, and that the injury to Lynch was not sustained in the course of his employment, because it occurred when he was not performing his specified duty. The court below submitted this theory to the jury by an instruction granted at the appellant's request, but its refusal to rule as a matter of law that the accident did not occur in the course of the employment of the injured man, as proposed by the appellant's second prayer, was entirely proper.
It was further urged that even if the injury should be considered to have occurred in the course of Lynch's employment, yet it must be held not to have arisen out of his employment, within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Law, because it "could not fairly be traced to his employment as a contributing proximate cause apart from the usual risks of driving on the public road." On this ground the appellant's first and third prayers sought to have the case withdrawn from the jury. *121
In view of the effect, as to presumptive correctness, given by the statute to the decisions of the State Industrial Accident Commission, and of the burden of proof placed upon the appellant in such cases (Code, Art. 101, § 56), the court below would not have been justified in directing a verdict for the appellant on the ground that it had successfully borne the burden thus imposed. Jewel Tea Co. v. Weber,
The fourth prayer of the appellant contained the proposition that if the accident was found to have occurred while the autobus was being driven on the public highway, and was caused by collision with a railroad safety gate, neither the highway nor the gate being under the appellant's control, and that the injury was not caused by any defect in the autobus, then the verdict should be for the appellant. Such an instruction would have improperly limited the dependent widow's right to compensation. The validity of her claim was not contingent upon the existence of negligence on the part of the employer of her husband in reference to providing him with a safe car in which to render the service for which he was employed, and the risks of his occupation, which made it extra-hazardous, were not confined to those arising from conditions over which his employer had exclusive control.
The fifth prayer offered by the appellant is the one heretofore referred to as having been granted.
The appellant's sixth prayer was to the effect that if the injury occurred in the course of the employment, but resulted from a hazard to which the driver of the autobus, "in common with other members of the public, was equally exposed apart from his employment," and the injury "could not fairly be traced to his employment as a contributing proximate cause apart from the usual risks of travel on the public road," then the appellant was entitled to a verdict in its favor. The rejection of this prayer was proper since there was no evidence legally sufficient to support the suggested finding that the injury resulted from a hazard common to the public and was not fairly traceable to the employment under consideration.
The seventh and last prayer of the appellant, which was also refused, included the statement that in order for the injury to be found to have arisen out of the employment, it *123 must appear that there was a "causal connection between the conditions under which the work was required to be performed and the resulting injury." This instruction was open to the objection that there was no evidence legally sufficient to sustain its hypothesis that there was no causal relation between the employment and the injury for which the pending claim is preferred.
The two prayers offered by the appellee were not questioned in the argument. They correctly instructed the jury as to the issue to be decided by the verdict and as to the burden of proof.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *124