Greenwald, Inc. v. Powdermaker

183 A. 601, 170 Md. 173, 1936 Md. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 20, 1936
Docket[No. 30, January Term, 1936.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 183 A. 601 (Greenwald, Inc. v. Powdermaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwald, Inc. v. Powdermaker, 183 A. 601, 170 Md. 173, 1936 Md. LEXIS 87 (Md. 1936).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this workmen’s compensation case, the claimant is the widow of Louis Powdermaker, who was killed, on May 29th, 1933, in a collision between his automobile and a street railway car on Liberty Heights Avenue in Baltimore. At the time of the accident, and for many years, Mr. Powdermaker was employed as a salesman by Greenwald, Inc., in its business of selling meat to retail dealers. It was his duty to visit such dealers and obtain orders for meat to be thereafter delivered. In that service he used his own automobile. According to the testimony in the record, he would customarily call *176 upon, prospective customers during the forenoon and then return to his home, where he would communicate by telephone with his employer’s office to learn the exact price quotations for the day, and also telephone customers in continuing and completing his sales negotiations. It was while he was homeward bound, about half past 11 o’clock in the morning, which was the usual time of his return with a view to using his telephone for the purposes just indicated, that he became involved in the accident which ended his life. The claim of his widow under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Code, art. 101, as amended) was sustained by the State Industrial Accident Commission, and its decision was affirmed, on the appeal of the employer and insurer, by the ¡Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore city. On their further appeal to this court, the principal question to be determined is whether the evidence has a legally sufficient tendency to prove that the accidental and fatal injury to the claimant’s husband was suffered in the course of his employment. That question was raised by a motion to reverse the order of the commission and by exceptions to rulings on the evidence and the prayers.

The testimony of the claimant as to her ¡husband’s customary activities as a salesman for Greenwald, Inc., was in part as follows:

“Q. What time would he leave the house? A. Any time between half past eight and nine o’clock. Q. Do you know where he went? A. Yes. Q. Where did he go and what did he do in the morning, do you know? A. Yes. After leaving the house he saw customers. Q. How long had he been doing that? A. For twenty or twenty-two years. * * * Q. About what time would he come home? A. At noon—any time between 11 and 12—mostly after 11 but it could happen at 11. * * * Q. After Mr. Powder-maker got home in the morning what would he do? A. Telephone. Q. Who would he phone to? A. Various customers. Q. How do you know that? A. I could hear him call up the A. & P. or Chicago Meat Market or any other meat markets or private small stores. Certainly I knew *177 it. Q. Have you any idea on an average how long he would use the telephone after he got home in the morning? A. About half an hour or longer. Always half an hour. * * * Q. Did he ever go down to the office in the morning. A. Never. Q, How do you know that? A. Well, if he wanted any information he phoned for that at the office. Q. When he got in around 11 o’clock in the morning, 11.10 or 11.30, did he ever call the office then? A. Yes. Q. Why would he call the office then? A. To get prices that he had offered on sales—to know whether he could accept those prices. Q. And then what would he do after he got the prices ? A. Phone the customer whether it was accepted or not. * * * Q. Have you any idea how many customers he would call up every day when he came home in the morning? A. Possibly ten or less or more. I could not say how many people he could not see. Q. And then had to phone them every day for the last twenty years—that has been his regular custom? A. Yes. Q. And after he finished his phoning what would he do ? A. Ate lunch. Q. And then what would he do? A. Telephone again and go. Q. Why did he come home to phone? Why didn’t he phone somewhere else? A. It was the expense for one thing, and he could always reach the people on one phone. It was more convenient to phone at home than in a public phone. It was more private—therefore he came home. * * * Q. You know about what time this accident happened? A. 11.15. Q. How do you know that? A. Because I looked at the clock just before. Q. Did you see the accident? A. No. Q. Did you look and see Mr. Powdermaker just before that? A. Yes.”

It was stipulated for the record that the accident occurred between 11.10 and 11.30 o’clock, when Mr. Powdermaker was within fifty feet of his home, and that his automobile and a street car of the United Railways & Electric Company were both proceeding westwardly on Liberty Heights Avenue and collided when the automobile was turned to the left, toward Mr. Powdermaker’s home, at a regular crossing.

An adult son of Mr. Powdermaker thus described his *178 father’s business habits as a salesman for Greenwald, Inc.:

“He left the house and went around to see his various accounts—his various customers and came home around 11.00 or 11.30 to telephone other customers that it was necessary to call on. Most of that business is done on the telephone. * * * It wasn’t necessary to call on them every day. It was only necessary to call them up to get requirements. Some customers would require a telephone call in the middle of the day and some at 2.00 o’clock and some at 3.00 and some 4.00 and some at 6.00 and some at 8.00—all through the day, and while home he would eat lunch and he would leave there around 12.00 and go to the plant. Q. Did he ever call the plant when he was home at times? A. Yes. Q. Do you know why? A. The prices of commodities of a packing house fluctuate every day and it was necessary some days to call in to get prices of the various commodities. * * * Q. Now how long has this been going on—this custom? A. This has been going on for as long as I can remember.”

The employer and insurer produced testimony from which it could be inferred that Mr. Powdermaker’s last business transaction on the morning of the accident was the collection of .rent from the tenants of two houses, which he owned, and that he was proceeding from one of those houses to his own home when he was fatally injured. But it is inferable from the other evidence in the case that he had been engaged during that morning in the performance of his salesmanship duties, including collections on account of sales, and was driving to his home with a view to serving further the objects of his employment by the use of his telephone at the period of the day when he customarily used that method of promoting his employer’s business. The commission and the jury concluded from the evidence in the record that the claimant’s husband, after deviating temporarily from the course of his employment in order to make his rent collections, had resumed his service to the employer when he was proceeding homeward for the purposes of the *179 communications which were habitually necessary in his sale operations. In our opinion the evidence was legally sufficient to permit' the inference, actually drawn alike by the commission and the jury, that the claimant lost her husband in consequence of an accidental injury in the course of his employment. This view is consistent with the principle recognized by the decisions in Southern Can Co. v. Sachs, 149 Md. 562, 131 A. 760; Boetler v. Gardiner-Buick Co., 164 Md., 478, 481, 165 A.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A. 601, 170 Md. 173, 1936 Md. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwald-inc-v-powdermaker-md-1936.