34 A.2d 698 | Conn. | 1943
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff workman was injured on the premises of the defendant and brought this action to recover damages. The sole question is whether he can recover at common law or is limited to his award under the Workmen's Compensation Act. The defendant claims that the work on which he was engaged when injured, which was performed upon the premises of the defendant, was a part or process in the trade or business of the defendant within the provisions of General Statutes, 5230.
No corrections in the findings are sought. On April 2, 1942, the plaintiff was working as a trucker's helper for the A.M. Larson Company, Inc., a trucking and storage concern in Waterbury. The defendant is a manufacturer of chemicals. There was an agreement *387 between the defendant and the Larson Company whereby the former stored on the premises of the latter such goods as the defendant desired or was unable to store at its own plant. Upon written or oral request from the defendant, the Larson Company, as a part of its regular business, would transport by truck to the premises of the defendant such merchandise as it ordered, and as a part of such transportation would unload the merchandise upon the loading platform of the defendant's building and place it where designated by the defendant within the building, piling or storing it in such manner as the defendant requested.
On the day when the plaintiff was injured, the defendant had ordered certain chemicals contained in metal drums to be delivered to its plant. On their arrival an employee of the defendant told the plaintiff where he wished to have the drums delivered and stored. The plaintiff was injured through the negligence of the defendant while he was wheeling a drum from the unloading platform to the place so indicated. This work, performed by the plaintiff on behalf of his employer, the Larson Company, was in accordance with the agreement and in the course of dealing between the Larson Company and the defendant.
On these facts the trial court concluded that the plaintiff was an invitee and was not an employee of the defendant and that the work upon which he was engaged was not a part or process in the trade or business of the defendant.
The statute (General Statutes 5230) is discussed and analyzed in King v. Palmer,
The question of the application of the compensation law was not raised in Girard v. Kabatznick,
There is error, the judgment is set aside, and the case is remanded with direction to enter judgment for the defendant.
In this opinion MALTBIE, C.J., BROWN and DICKENSON, Js., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
The question is whether the work being done by the Larson Company's employee, at the time he was injured, was a part or process in the trade or business of the defendant, the MacDermid Company. We must abide by the finding, for it was not attacked. As I read it, it says quite plainly that the work the plaintiff was doing when he was injured was a part of the Larson Company's transportation job, and not a part or process in MacDermid's business. This being so, the King and Hoard cases are not applicable.