Chamberlain v. Taylor
This text of 269 N.W. 525 (Chamberlain v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Proceedings instituted before the industrial commission to recover compensation on account of an injury sustained by respondent.
The relator, W. E. Taylor, operates an automobile repair shop in the city of Minneapolis. Respondent, Rollin Chamberlain, was employed by relator until April 13, 1935. On that day, respondent, while engaged in removing a tire from a rim, was injured when the monkey wrench he was using slipped and struck him in the eye.
The matter was referred to a referee, who found for respondent, awarding compensation for the period of healing and loss of the left eye. On appeal the industrial commission affirmed the findings of the referee. The matter is before this court on certiorari.
Only one question is presented. Hoes the record support the finding that respondent’s injury arose out of and in the course of his employment?
*275 Relator contends that the injury did not result from an accident arising out of and in the course of respondent’s employment because the injury occurred as a proximate result of wilful disobedience of explicit orders. It is claimed that relator instructed respondent a few moments before the accident not to use the particular tools he was using and to wait until he (relator) brought him the proper tool. Relator testified to this effect.
On the other hand, respondent testified as follows:
Q. “How did you come to use the screwdriver?
A. “He and I both was using the screwdriver; that is the only way it can be lifted up.
Q. “You say that Taylor told you to get the wrench, and he did not say what particular kind of wrench to get?
A. “No.
Q. “That Avas after you and he had been working on it together some?
A. “Yes, and he psed the same wrench.
Q. “The same Avrench you had been using?
A. “Yes, he had it in his hand and said he wanted to go out and handed me the wrench. This was not broken when Taylor told me to take it off. We had not got the rim broken.
Q. “You and Taylor had been trying to break it by use of the screwdriver and the wrench?
A. “Yes.
Q. “Then he said after that something about getting a wrench?
A. “No, he told me to get the wrench when we started to take it off at the beginning. When he suav this Avas broken off and Ave could not use it, he told me to get a Avrench, and I walked over to the toolbox and picked up the monkey Avrench, and he said, ‘That’s all right.’ I inserted the screwdriver under the catch and put the monkey AA-rench on the catch in an up-and-doAvn position and twisted it.”
It Avas AA-hile using the screAvdriver and the wrench referred to in the above testimony that respondent was injured. The record before us shows the evidence to be in conflict on the question of whether or not the employe Avas using the tools in direct A'iolation *276 of relator’s orders. The case is a typical one for the application of the principle that where there is a conflict in the evidence and the inferences raised thereby it is for the triers of fact to choose ivhich to believe, and this court can pass only upon the question of whether or not their decision is reasonably supported by the record. Reinhard v. Universal Film Exch. Inc. 197 Minn. 371, 267 N. W. 223.
We hold that the decision of the industrial commission is amply supported by the evidence presented, and its decision must be affirmed.
Employe-respondent is allowed $100 attorney’s fees in this court. So ordered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
269 N.W. 525, 198 Minn. 274, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-taylor-minn-1936.