Continental Baking Co. v. Industrial Commission

267 N.W. 540, 222 Wis. 432, 1936 Wisc. LEXIS 469
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 267 N.W. 540 (Continental Baking Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Baking Co. v. Industrial Commission, 267 N.W. 540, 222 Wis. 432, 1936 Wisc. LEXIS 469 (Wis. 1936).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed June 22, 1936 :

Fritz, J.

Upon this appeal the principal question is whether the evidence warrants the commission’s determination that Fay Drew was injured on August 31, 1933, while performing services growing out of and incidental to his employment, within the terms and provisions of sec. 102.03, Stats. It is undisputed that he was in the employment of the Continental Baking Company (hereinafter called the Baking Company) for four years prior to that date, but plaintiffs contend that on the night of his injury he was doing unauthorized acts in an unauthorized way and outside the scope of his employment, although he thought they were for the benefit of his employer; and that, under those conditions, there is no liability under the compensation act.

There is no material conflict in the evidence. Drew was employed as a supervisor by the Baking Company at its branch for the Milwaukee district to supervise the sale and delivery of its products by ten routemen to retail food stores in the city of South Milwaukee and adjacent territory. As is stated in the findings made by the majority of the commissioners, in approving an award reported by an examiner, Drew’s “duties, among other things, were to supervise sales in his territory, to keep the company informed [434]*434of anything that came up that he could not handle, to pull routes when sales were off, to break in new route salesmen, to keep up sales and open new accounts and generally to be responsible for sales in his territory.” Pie was killed upon his automobile leaving the road and overturning while he was returning from South Milwaukee to Milwaukee (where he resided) after midnight on August 30, 1933, with A1 Thiesen, one of the Baking Company’s routemen, who had formerly delivered its products in South Milwaukee. The accident may have been due to either the sudden deflation of a tire, or to excessive speed.

Drew’s daily work usually began at 7 a. m. and continued until he returned and completed his report at his employer’s Milwaukee plant and offlce at about 4 p. m. However, on the night of the accident, Drew, accompanied by Thiesen, had driven tO' South Milwaukee in Drew’s automobile and attended a meeting held there by the South Milwaukee Retail Food Dealers Association from 8 to 11 p. m., and after that meeting, until midnight, Drew and Thiesen attended a waitress’ birthday party at a restaurant to which Drew had been invited.. The meeting had been called by the association to consider taking action in relation to three dealers who kept their stores open on Sundays. Some of the association’s members, who. were customers of the Baking Company, had asked its routeman, William Schroeder, and also Drew, to stop deliveries to those three dealers, and had threatened to have the association’s members quit taking the Baking Company’s products if those deliveries were not stopped. Drew had reported the matter to L. A. Barrett, who was the Baking Company’s regional manager at Chicago, but was also acting temporarily as its manager at Milwaukee. On August 27, 1933, Barrett, accompanied by Drew and Schroeder, had called on several of the association’s members and one of the dealers who refused to close on Sundays. Barrett, in discussing the matter with the [435]*435members, had told them that it was the Baking Company’s policy not to stop serving any customer at the request of another. He urged the other dealer to close his store on Sundays. After those conferences, Barrett told Drew and Schroeder that, because of the Baking Company’s policy, all customers would have to be served, and that Drew should not worry about'or pay too much attention to the matter, and it would soon clear up by itself. However, when Drew called at their stores on August 30, 1933, the vice-president and the secretary of the association asked him to come to a meeting of the members of the association called for that night to consider the Sunday-closing matter. When Drew returned to the Baking Company’s plant at 4 p. m. that afternoon, he told Frank Borisch, a senior supervisor, about the proposed meeting, and asked him to accompany him there and also to the birthday party. Borisch replied that he could not go because of other work which he had to do for their employer. He did not tell Drew not to go, but he testified herein that it was not customary for supervisors to attend meetings for any such purpose, and that they were to report such matters to the plant manager. Drew, after his conversation with Borisch, and in the latter’s hearing, asked Thiesen to accompany him to the meeting and the party. Barrett did not hear the conversation between Drew and Borisch although he was near to them at. the time. Drew went into Barrett’s office after inviting Thiesen, and there he talked with Barrett, but did not tell him about the proposed meeting or that he had been requested to attend and intended to go.

The Baking Company had two automobiles and a truck, which its supervisors had been told to use when they went out on the company’s business. All of its cars were equipped with governors limiting the speed to thirty-five miles per hour, were covered by proper automobile liability insurance, and were painted for advertising purposes. But Drew used [436]*436his own car on the night of the accident instead of using or asking for one of his employer’s cars. He originally intended to have his wife and Thiesen’s wife accompany them on the trip and attend the birthday party, but because Thiesen had not mentioned the party to his wife, she decided not to go and therefore Mrs. Drew did not go. At the meeting, Drew told the association members that under the Baking Company’s policy its routemen were not permitted to stop delivering to a customer, but that in order to aid the association the routeman, in delivering bread to dealers who refused to close their stores on Sundays, would occasionally omit to make a delivery or not deliver as much as was desired. The examiner appointed to take the testimony and who reported the award found “that it was a general policy of the respondent not to interfere in controversial matters such as would likely be brought up at the meeting in South Milwaukee . . . ; also, that it was one of the rules of the respondent that any employee on company business should use cars furnished by the respondent; that this rule was not always strictly adhered to.” The commission did not mention that policy and that rule in the findings which it made in approving the award.

As there is no substantial dispute as to the material facts, the determination by the examiner and the commission that Drew was injured while performing services growing out of and incidental to his employment was virtually but a conclusion of law, which may be reviewed on appeal “for the purpose of ascertaining whether they support the conclusion of the commission.” Olson Rug Co. v. Industrial Comm. 215 Wis. 344, 345, 254 N. W. 519, citing Tesch v. Industrial Comm. 200 Wis. 616, 229 N. W. 194. Upon such a review, the following facts and conditions are of controlling significance: Drew, at the time of his injury, was returning by the usual route, from a trip which he made primarily for the purpose of attending the association’s meeting in order [437]*437to further the sales and interests of his employer, but incidentally thereto he also intended to attend the birthday party.

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Bluebook (online)
267 N.W. 540, 222 Wis. 432, 1936 Wisc. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-baking-co-v-industrial-commission-wis-1936.