Continental Casualty Co. v. Caldwell

189 S.E. 408, 55 Ga. App. 17, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 420
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 30, 1936
Docket25504
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 189 S.E. 408 (Continental Casualty Co. v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Casualty Co. v. Caldwell, 189 S.E. 408, 55 Ga. App. 17, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 420 (Ga. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

MacIntyre, J.

The exception is to a judgment of the superior court approving an award of the Department of Industrial Delations in favor of "William Caldwell, employee, and against the Georgia Marble Company, employer, and the Continental Casualty Company, insurance carrier. It appears from the record that the Continental Casualty Company was the insurance carrier for the employer’s plant at Nelson, Georgia, and that the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company was the insurance carrier at other places where the Georgia Marble Company operated, including Griffin, but not Nelson. The Georgia Marble Company' and the Continental Casualty Company, are the plaintiffs in error, and William Caldwell and the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company are defendants in error. We have first to consider a motion made in this court to remand “this controversy to the Department of Industrial Delations for the purpose of taking the newly discovered evidence set forth in the affidavit of Mrs. A. J. Caldwell, and such other evidence as may be pertinent or material to the issues involved in this case.” This motion avers that “subsequent to the hearing in this matter before the Department of Industrial Delations, and subsequent to the oral argument in . . this court, plaintiffs in error have been furnished with” said affidavit. The purport of this affidavit is that Caldwell received his injury by falling over a box in his home and sticking a splinter in his eye at a time when he was intoxicated, — an incident entirely disconnected with his master’s business. “The design of the workmen’s compensation act is to furnish a speedy, inexpensive, and final settlement of the claim of injured employees. The act abhors and shuns protracted and complicated litigation over the facts of any case. . . For this reason the act makes the finding of the industrial commission upon the facts final and conclusive. The finding of that body upon the facts can not be reviewed in the superior court, if there is evidence to support its finding. Such finding can not be reviewed in the appellate court. The finality of a finding of the industrial commission upon the facts of the case is conclusive and binding upon all courts. The purpose of the act in making such finding conclusive was to avoid the law’s delay, which is often the subject of complaint.” Mwry[19]*19land Casualty Co. v. England, 160 Ga. 810, 812 (129 S. E. 75). In their motion the movants “ submit that . . under § 114-710 of the Code of 1933 this court has authority to recommit the controversy to the Department of Industrial Delations for further hearing in said case.” We find nothing either in the section cited, or in any other part of the workmen’s compensation act, which authorizes this court to remand this ease because of the alleged newly discovered evidence. “Unless so permitted by the compensation act, the reviewing court can not grant a new trial for newly discovered evidence.” 71 C. J. 1398, § 1340; Town of Albion v. Industrial Commission, 202 Wis. 15 (231 N W. 249); Luyk v. Hertel, 242 Mich. 445 (219 N. W. 721). It is evident that the purpose of the motion in this case is to procure another hearing or trial before the Department of Industrial Delations, because of the alleged newly discovered evidence. To grant the motion would, we think, be to run counter to the very purpose and spirit of our compensation act, and we find no authority for granting it. We therefore decline to sustain the motion.

Two controlling questions are presented by the record in this case: (1) whether the employee’s injury arose out of and in the course of his employment; and (2) whether his injury was covered by the insurance policy of the Continental Casualty Company, or by the policy issued by the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company. The Georgia Marble Company was engaged in the business of fabricating marble and erecting its finished product. It also did landscape work where such product was erected. Said company had plants at several places, including Nelson, Georgia. William Caldwell was a “work foreman” for that company, and did landscape work for it. He worked most of the time at Nelson, but was “ occasionally” sent to work at Griffin and other places. Certain marble, “finished at the Nelson plant,” was hauled to Griffin to be used “on a big job” there. Mr. Anderson was vice-president of the Georgia Marble Company. W. H. Caldwell was paid by the hour for his work. W. H. Caldwell testified, in part, as follows: “On Saturday . . , the 13th of April, my boss, Mr. Anderson . . , told me to get ready on Monday to finish up the Griffin job, . . load trucks, and get the amount of everything I had to have on Monday, and early Tuesday morning get down there early enough to do that day’s [20]*20work and get back into Nelson tbe same day. On Monday morning I leaped out of bed . . and went out and picked up an old double-bladed ax. . . I had to have a little brace about fourteen inches long, and I picked up . . the ax, and there was a pile of ceiling and flooring throwed out from the planer at the side door, and I went to pick me out a board. I picked up one. . . It was a short piece of plank. I laid it upon a timber lying on the ground and went to cut it off, and it flew up and hit me in the eye. I carried my ax on back to the house and left the board lying there. I don’t know what became of it. . . I taken two more tablets to ease my eye and head . . it got kind of numb and quit hurting. Along about eleven o’clock my truck that I was going to take to Griffin with me drove by the front of the yard. I had given the orders to him on Saturday. I told him to drive over by ' . . I punched on and went over and loaded the sod and loaded up the truck, and drove it back to the plant and parked it until morning.” This witness further testified that he “was right at the plant . . between two buildings of the plant” when he hurt his eye; that when injured he was attempting to make “a brace to be used in the material” he was' carrying to Griffin; that he had already done some work at Griffin, and was sent there to finish it up; that Mr. Anderson was vice-president of the Georgia Marble Company and was in charge of “the Griffin operation and the Georgia Marble Company;” that the “brace” he was working on when hit was being made “to take to Griffin on Tuesday on this job;” that the Nelson plant opened at seven o’clock, and had not opened when he was hurt, and he did not punch the clock until “a little before one o’clock” that afternoon; that on that day he.did not work in the plant, but “was over in the golf field cutting sod;” that he worked there “practically all evening,” and “punched out at the same place” he “punched in,” the Nelson plant; that he was paid for that work at the Nelson plant; that he was not paid anything for working the morning he was hurt; that his eye was hurting him so much that he “didn’t turn in nothing;” that he '“would have turned it in on 52-1/2 cents an hour while . . working;” and that he lost his left eye because of said injury.

P. EL Sharkey testified, in part, that Mr. Anderson was vice-president of the Georgia Marble Company, and was in charge of [21]*21any work done in the Nelson plant and of outside work in other cities, and the witness was “office manager in Mr. Anderson’s office ;” that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.E. 408, 55 Ga. App. 17, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-casualty-co-v-caldwell-gactapp-1936.