Continental Casualty Co. v. Haynie

181 S.E. 126, 51 Ga. App. 650, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 431
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1935
Docket24283
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 181 S.E. 126 (Continental Casualty Co. v. Haynie) 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. Haynie, 181 S.E. 126, 51 Ga. App. 650, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 431 (Ga. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MacIntyre, J.

Haynie filed claim for compensation under the workmen’s compensation laws of this State against Foremost Dairies Inc. Continental Casualty Company carried the compensation insurance for said corporation. Claimant was awarded compensation, and this award was approved by the full board of the Department of Industrial Eelations. On appeal to the superior court that judgment was affirmed and the appeal denied, and the insurance carrier and the alleged employer excepted.

1. The conception underlying workmen’s compensation is one of insurance. The scheme is equivalent in its results to a species of insurance in favor of workmen. The principle underlying the act is one more akin to insurance at the expense of the employer of the workman against accidents arising out of and in the course of the workman’s employment than to the imposition on the employer of liability for anything for which he might reasonably be made answerable on the ground that he ought to have foreseen and prevented it.

2. Compensation and the right thereto are based solely on the fact of employment, the liability likewise arising out of the relationship of employer and employee, and the rights and duties of the respective parties under the compensation act arise out of, and are incidental to, the contract of employment. See Cudahy Packing Co. v. Parramore, 263 U. S. 418 (44 Sup. Ct. 153). The intent of the act was to secure compensation to workmen for the perils of their employment, the risk of which it had been previously thought they assumed as a part of the contract of employment, for which they were rightly or wrongly supposed to be compensated by their wages. • In any event, the right of the statutory compensation is a part of the compensation of the employee for services rendered. It is one of the necessary expenses of the business against which the employer must protect himself the same as he does in the daily, weekly, or monthly wages regularly paid out to his employees.

3. The workmen’s compensation act forms a legislative response to a public demand that a system be afforded whereby employers and employees might esea,pe from personal injury litigation, and every employee not guilty of wilful misconduct might receive at once a reasonable recompense for injuries accidentally received in his employment under fixed rules and without friction. Mulhall v. Nashua Mfg. Co., 80 N. H. 194 (115 Atl. 449). The great object [652]*652or theory of the workmen’s compensation laws is to shift the burden of economic loss, entailed by personal injuries to workmen necessarily accompanying modern industrial operations, from the employee to the industrjr, in order that it may ultimately be borne by the consumer as a part of the necessary cost of production, rather than by the one particular establishment in which the employee was working while injured. See 71 C. J. 215, § 15; U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Stapleton, 37 Ga. App. 707 (141 S. E. 506). Its fundamental purpose is that the industry or employment which requires human agency for its operation should look to the care and upkeep of that agency, and afford speedy and inexpensive relief to injured employees without resort to litigation in the law courts. Maryland Casualty Co. v. England, 160 Ga. 810 (129 S. E. 75).

4. So the workmen’s compensation- act is to be construed and interpreted by the courts in the light of, or so as to promote, its purposes and objects, with reference to its subjects, and in the light of, or so as to remedy, the ills or evils that the act was intended to -remove. Such act is remedial and has a beneficent purpose, and it should be accorded a liberal and broad construction or interpretation in order to promote or effectuate its purposes. Van Treeck v. Travelers Ins. Co., 157 Ga. 201 (121 S. E. 215); Austin Brothers Bridge Co. v. Whitmire, 31 Ga. App. 560 (121 S. E. 315); Pridgen v. Murphy, 41 Ga. App. 147 (160 S. E. 701). The act should be given interpretation for the benefit of and in favor of the employees and their dependents. The act should be held to include all employments and services which can reasonably be said to come under its provisions, though a forced construction of the wording thereof to accomplish this will not be indulged in. See Pridgen v. Murphy, supra. The definition of “employee” contained in the compensation act, as to who shall be deemed employees, is to bo broadly or liberally construed in order to effectuate the purpose of the legislation, and to the -end that in a doubtful case an injured employee may not be deprived of the benefits of the act. “We should not construe the act to exclude . . the employee from participation of the benefits therein, unless the language is so plain as to dictate otherwise.” Gunnoe v. Glofora Coal Co., 93 W. Va. 636 (117 S. E. 481, 487); 71 C. J. 417, § 160.

5. Any person whose employment is not in the usual course of a trade, business, profession, or occupation of his employer, or is [653]*653not incidental thereto, is excluded from the right to compensation under the express provisions of the workmen’s compensation law of this State. Under section 2(b) of the compensation act (Code of 1933, § 114-101), an “employee” includes “e.very person . . in the service of another under any contract of hire . . written or implied, except one whose employment is not in the usual course of the trade, business, occupation, or profession of the employer.” Under section 15 (Code of 1933, § 114-107), the exclusion from the act applies only to “employees not in the usual course of the trade, business, occupation, or profession of the employer or not incidental thereto.” Ga. L. 1920, pp. 167, 177; Ga. L. 1925, pp. 282, 283.

(а) Therefore a carpenter who is engaged with others to aid in the alteration, repair and enlargement of the offices of a corporation doing a dairy business, which offices are essential to the successful carrying on of such trade or business in an efficient and modern manner, and who will not be retained after the completion of such carpenter work, comes within the workmen’s compensation act as an “employee” in the service of the dairy corporation, whose employment is “in the usual course of the trade, business, . . of the employer” or “incidental thereto.” See, in this connection, Maloney v. Kirby, 48 Ga. App. 252 (172 S. E. 683); City of Waycross v. Hayes, 48 Ga. App. 317 (172 S. E. 756); Hendrickson v. Com., 215 Cal. 82 (8 Pac. (2d) 833); Globe Ind. Co. v. Com., 45 Cal. App. 328 (187 Pac. 452); Klumpp v. Com., 107 Cal. App. 733 (291 Pac. 456); Wagner v. Wooley, 85 Ind. App. 259 (152 N E. 856); Hill’s Case, 268 Mass. 491 (167 N. E. 914); Carter v. Dyer, 186 Minn. 413 (243 N. W. 436); Bosel v. Henderson Holding Co., 167 Minn. 72 (208 N. W. 421); Dietz Club v. Hiehaus, 110 Neb. 154 (193 N. W. 344); Nedela v. Mares Auto Co., 106 Neb. 883 (184 N. W. 885); Commercial Standard Ins. Co. v. DeHart (Tex. Civ. App.), 47 S. W. (2d) 898; Hasenfus v. Com., 184 Wis. 281 (199 N. W. 158) ; Rogalski v. Industrial Com., 342 Ill. 37 (173 N. E. 813).

(б) As typical cases as to when one can not be considered such an employee, see Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Thompson, 167 Ga. 897 (147 S. E. 50); Tunnicliff v. Bettendorf, 204 Iowa, 168 (214 N.

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181 S.E. 126, 51 Ga. App. 650, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-casualty-co-v-haynie-gactapp-1935.