Beaver City v. Industrial Commission

245 P. 378, 67 Utah 8, 1926 Utah LEXIS 25
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1926
DocketNo. 4338.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 245 P. 378 (Beaver City v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaver City v. Industrial Commission, 245 P. 378, 67 Utah 8, 1926 Utah LEXIS 25 (Utah 1926).

Opinion

STRAUP, J.

This is a review of a record of the Industrial Commission. The principal question is whether the injury arose out of or in the course of the employment of the injured. The commission held that it did, and made an award.

The employe was city marshal of Beaver City. He was regularly on duty from about 8:30 a. m. until about 11 p. m., sometimes, as occasion required, until after midnight, and was subject to call at all hours of the day and night. The commission found that, while the marshal was driving cattle out of the park, and in his jumping a ditch, his revolver fell out of his pocket and in the ditch and got wet and muddy. He had no regular office and no convenient place to clean the gun except at his residence nearby. He went home about 5:30 p. m., about a half hour earlier than usual, for dinner and to clean and oil the gun at his house. While cleaning it, the gun was accidentally discharged, the bullet striking him in the knee and injuring him. The officer testified, and the* commission found, that the carrying of a gun was necessary *10 in connection with his employment and in the discharge of his duties. That is not disputed. Nor is it claimed that cleaning the gun, or keeping it clean, was not an incident to or no part of the employment or of the officer’s duties. It is not made to appear whether the gun was the property of the city or of the officer, nor do we think that controlling. The contention is that the officer going to his home to clean, and while he was there cleaning, the gun was not then on duty nor on his way to or from duty, nor then acting as an officer, and that the time and place voluntarily chosen and selected by him was one off duty and a place away from the scene of his official activities and employment, and hence, the cleaning of the gun under such circumstances was not in the course of his employment nor a natural incident thereto. To support the contention, the cases of De Voe v. New York State Rys., 113 N. E. 256, 218 N. Y. 318, L. R. A. 1917A, 250, Scanlon v. Herald Co., 194 N. Y. S. 663, 201 App. Div. 173, Hornby’s Case (Mass.) 147 N. E. 577, and notes to cases in 12 N. C. C. A. 387, are cited.

In the first case cited, the employe was a motorman residing at Mohawk. On the day of the accident, he had finished his work for the day, and, while hurrying from the roundhouse at Mohawk to catch a train of the New York State Railways to go to Herkimer to have his watch tested, he, near the curb of the street, was struck by an automobile and injured. Under the rules of the company he was required to have his watch tested once in every two weeks. The employes were not paid for the time which they consumed in having their watches tested or in going to and from the place where the tests were to be made. The court took the view that the motorman “was not employed to have his watch regulated, and therefore was not injured while doing a duty that he was employed to perform. He was not injured while on duty, nor on the way to or from his duty within the precincts of the company,” and hence affirmed the order of the "commission denying an award. We here perceive a somewhat dissimilar situation. The accident occurred between the *11 regular hours of the marshal, and, further, the employe here in a sense was on duty all-the time. He was not, like the motorman, on duty only during specified hours, at the termination of which he was off duty. There the court held that testing or having tested his watch was no part of the motorman’s employment nor an incident thereto. Here, cleaning the gun — keeping it in suitable condition — may, on the record, well be said to have been a part of the duty of the marshal, or at least a natural incident thereto'. There the motorman was injured, not while discharging some duty incident to his employment, but while on his way, or about to go, to some place to have his watch tested, which, as the court there said, was no part of his employment. Here the marshal was not injured while going to some place to clean the gun, but while he was actually cleaning it, actually engaged at something which it is not disputed was an incident to his employment. In other words, had the marshal no duty to perform with respect to the cleaning of the gun or keeping it in a clean or suitable condition, and when off duty and not connected with his employment, and without direction, had undertaken to take the gun to some other town or place to there have it cleaned, and on his way was injured in a public street by a danger — struck by an automobile — not peculiar nor pertaining to the employment, but common to everyone on the street, a similarity with such a case and the De Voe Case might be perceived. Or had it in the De Voe Case been shown that it was the duty of the motorman to adjust or repair his watch or to do so was naturally incident to the employment, and while he was so repairing or adjusting it, the crystal of the watch, let it be assumed, had accidentally been broken and pieces thereof cast into his eye, injuring it, such a case would be more nearly similar to this than is the reported case.

In Scanlon v. Herald Co. the employe of the advertising department of a newspaper, to facilitate his work, took a copy with him on going home to lunch at 5 p. m. to there prepare it for the printers and on returning to the office at *12 about 6:40 p. m. slipped on the street and was injured. The work consisted principally of marking on the copy directions as to the size of type to be used in printing the different types. He did some of that work at his home before supper, and after supper was on his way to the office, when he slipped and fell on the street. The employe there was not injured in the performance of the work, preparing the advertising matter. The dangers walking along the street from his house to the plant or newspaper office were not incident to his employment, but were dangers common to all. Nor was it made to appear that the street was in such close proximity to the plant or connected with it as an ingress thereto or egress therefrom in any sense as to be a part of the plant, or situated in such a way that to be upon the street practically amounted to being on the premises of his employer. The employe here was not injured under any such conditions or in any condition going to or from his place of work or to his employer’s premises.

In Hornby’s Case it was held that the injury of a watchman while going from his employer’s place of business to police headquarters to be sworn as a special officer from being struck by an automobile in a public street did not arise out of his employment. Said the court:

“In this commonwealth in proceedings under the Workman’s Compensation Act * * * to be entitled to compensation the injury must arise out of or be caused by the employment. It has been held that an injury resulting from a collision with an automobile, moving on a public street, is not an injury which under ordinary circumstances arises out of the employment, although at the time the employe is engaged in the employer’s business. It has been held that the danger of being struck by a passing automobile does not arise out of the employment, but is a danger peculiar to public travel, to which all pedestrians upon the public ways are exposed.”

We think the case in hand is not of that character.

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Bluebook (online)
245 P. 378, 67 Utah 8, 1926 Utah LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaver-city-v-industrial-commission-utah-1926.