This is an action at law under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Louisiana (Act No. 20 of 1914), in which the minor children of Carl Lindberg, deceased, by their next friend, sued in a state court of Texas to recover for the accidental death by drowning of their father, during the course of his employment as assistant engineer of a dredgeboat. The defendants were
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the United Dredging Company, owner and operator of the dredgeboat, and the Southern Casualty Company, surety on the Dredging Company’s bond. The plaintiffs were citizens of Texas, and the defendants were corporations under the laws of other states. The damages were laid at $6,000, and because of diversity of citizenship the case was removed to the federal District Court for the Southern District of Texas.
The petition was demurred to on the grounds (1) that the cause of action was within the exclusive jurisdiction of the admiralty law; or, if this were not so, (2) that the liability asserted could not be enforced elsewhere than in a state court of Louisiana. The demurrer was overruled, and a trial was had before the District Judge without a jury. The facts are not in dispute:
The Dredging Company had a contract to dig a navigable canal from the Sabine river, on the boundary line between Texas and Louisiana, to Lake Charles, in Louisiana. In pursuance of that contract its dredge was cutting a canal across land, and was kept afloat by water which filled up the canal as it was cut. Lindberg was second engineer on the dredge-boat, and while acting as such the engine room became so hot and close that he went up on deck to cool off. He sat down on one of thd bitts located about amidships along the side of the dredgeboat, where he remained some time, probably an hour, and until an oiler came up and asked him what he was doing there. Lindberg, when discovered by the oiler, was sitting 'in a leaning position, with his head resting on his hands, and when accosted raised up and immediately fell overboard. The oiler testified that Lindberg’s appearance indicated that he was sick, and that he did not seem to go overboard voluntarily. The engines were stopped, and a search was made for Lindberg’s body, but it was not found. The District Judge entered a judgment for the plaintiffs.
Defendants assign error, and contend that the demurrer should have been sustained, and that the evidence was not sufficient to show either that Lindberg’s death was due to accident, or that it occurred in the course of his employment.
In our opinion, the demurrer was not sustainable on the first ground. The kind of work that was being done at the time of Lindberg’s death was well described by the District Judge as follows: “While there was deep water around the dredge, and the channel she was digging was intended to be navigated when finished, she was in fact merely eating her way over land * * • to create a navigable channel.” That maritime jurisdiction in such a case as this is not prejudicially interfered with by the statute in question was held by the Supreme Court in Millers’ Underwriters v. Braud,
On principle, the other ground of the demurrer seems to be equally untenable. The rule that the statute of one state will be enforced by courts outside that state should be applied to Workmen’s Compensation Laws, unless some insuperable obstacle is presented. The Louisiana Compensation Law provides for its enforcement in the courts of that state, and, in the ease of injury to an employee, for a review and modification of a judgment after the expiration of a year from its entry. Act No. 20 of 1914. The liability created is enforceable in the courts of another state (Tenn. Coal Co. v. George,
There does not appear to be any reason that would prevent any court that has once taken jurisdiction from granting a review and modification of its judgment after the term had expired at which such judgment was entered ; but that feature of the statute is immaterial in this case, inasmuch as this suit sought judgment on account of death. In Texas Pipe Line Co. v. Ware,
The case of Delaware, etc., R. R. Co. v. Peck,
On the merits: The presumption against suicide, and the oiler’s testimony, justified the conclusion of the District Judge that Lindberg’s death was accidental. Lindberg’s illness was not shown to be more than temporary. The evidence does not support the theory that he died suddenly from natural causes. He was alive at the time he fell into the water, and the natural inference, in the absence of proof to the contrary, is that he was drowned. His death occurred during the course of his employment. It is immaterial that at the moment of death he was not in the actual performance of his duty. An employee is deemed to be acting in the course of his employment whenever he is present and ready to obey orders, although, even for purposes of his own, he has temporarily ceased his work. Harvey v. T. & P. Ry. Co. (C. C. A.)
The judgment is affirmed.
