99 Ga. App. 45 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1959
Code § 114-105 provides: “No compensa,tion shall be allowed for an injury or death due to the employee’s wilful misconduct, including intentionally self-inflicted injury, or growing out of his attempt to injure another, or due to intoxication or wilful failure or refusal to use a safety appliance or perform a duty required by statute. . . The burden of proof shall be upon him who claims an exemption or forfeiture under this section.” “Wilful misconduct” means violations which are conscious or intentional, not those which are inadvertent, unconscious or involuntary. Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Carroll, 169 Ga. 333 (Id) (150 S. E. 208). The evidence here is entirely circumstantial, and where one having the burden of establishing a point
As to the testimony regarding excessive speed (which alone would not under ordinary circumstances constitute wilful misconduct; see Armour & Co. v. Little, 83 Ga. App. 762 (b), 64 S. E. 2d 707), it is totally insufficient to authorize a finding that excessive speed caused the automobile in which the employee was riding to go off the road. The only evidence as to the speed of the automobile was by one witness who testified that he based his conclusion entirely upon a chart put out by Northwestern University and otherwise unidentified. The conclusion reached was thus hearsay, and there was no testimony that the same facts, as shown by the condition of the car afterward, were not consistent with the employee traveling within the legal speed limits. On the issue of intoxication, no witness testified that the defendant was drunk or even that they saw him drinking, although the fact that he had drunk some alcoholic beverage is sustained by two witnesses who smelled it upon his breath. The case accordingly closely resembles that of Parks v. Maryland Cas. Co., 69 Ga. App. 720 (26 S. E. 2d 562) where the employee was found unconscious on the road, his automobile wrecked; it was proved that he had had two small drinks of whisky shortly before j the doctor at the hospital smelled alcohol on his breath and diagnosed his condition as alcoholism. The court, reversing an award denying compensation, held: “Irrespective of the evidence being insufficient to show that the wreck was caused by the deceased’s intoxication, if he were intoxicated, the evidence is insufficient to show that the deceased was intoxicated.
The judge of the superior court did not err in reversing the award denying compensation.
Judgment affirmed.