Guillot v. Industrial Commission of Puerto Rico

60 P.R. 658
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 8, 1942
DocketNo. 242
StatusPublished

This text of 60 P.R. 658 (Guillot v. Industrial Commission of Puerto Rico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guillot v. Industrial Commission of Puerto Rico, 60 P.R. 658 (prsupreme 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

Eduvigis Guillot, for herself and as mother with patria protestas over her minor son, Lester. Agustín García, and Damiana Garcia have applied to this court for the review of a- decision of the Industrial Commission of March 27, 1942, whereby a dismissal was ordered of the appeal taken by [659]*659them from a decision of the Manager of the State Insurance Fund of March'9, 1938, declaring noncompensable the accident that caused the death of the workman Agustín García.

They alleged that the commission erred in holding that in order for the accident to he compensable it is indispensable that the place where the accident occurs should he under the control of the employer; that a public highway which crosses the employer’s land and which forms an integral part of the means of communication for going to and iron? the property of the employer is not a part of the premises of the employer for the purpose of the Workmen’s Compensation Act; in not applying to the case at bar the doctrine laid down in the case of Bountiful Brick Co. v. Giles, (1928) 72 L. ed. 507, in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that “the necessary way of ingress and egress” to the premises where the work is done is a part of such premises; in giving to its own finding of fact as to the connection between the premises and the highway a different legal scope from that which it has under the law and the jurisprudence; and in applying to the facts of this case the “street accident” doctrine when the applicable doctrine is the one relative to the incidental risks existing in the proximity of the place where the employer invites the employee to work.

After the writ 'had been issued, the commission sent up the original record and on the 8th of last June a hearing was held before this court with the attendance of counsel for the appellants and the State Insurance Fund who submitted their arguments after filing their respective briefs.

Pursuant to the initial investigation made, the Manager of the State Insurance Fund stated in substance the facts and weighed the same in connection with the statute as follows :

“From the investigation made in this case, it appears that the occurrence took place after working hours, on a public highway, [660]*660while the workman was returning to his home riding a bicycle. Evidently this accident is not cov'ered by the Workmen’s Accident Compensation Act, approved April 18, 1935 ...”

The Industrial Commission, as a result of the hearing held before it pursuant to the appeal taken, held as proven the following facts:

“On May 6, 1937, Agustín Garcia, the workman in this case, had already been working three days as a cartman on the cane plantation 'Cintrona 2aowned by Sucn. J. Serrallés and located within the jurisdiction of Juana Diaz, earning wages at the rate of $1.75 per day. On that same day, after quitting his work at 4:30 in the afternoon and after washing himself and changing into his street clothes, he got bn his bicycle which he used as a means of transportation from Ponce where he lived to the place of his work and going upon the road leading from said plantation he turned into the public highway which runs from Ponce to Guayama and is known as the 'Littoral Highway’. He had just traveled a distance of about half a kilometer towards the right of the highway in the direction of Ponce when, upon reaching a place opposite the great lane which leads from said highway through land of the Merceditas Hacienda to Central Merceditas, he met two automobiles which were coming at great speed from the direction of Ponce. One of them, on the left, maneuvered as if to go towards said Central and thereupon Agustín García, in order to avoid colliding with it. swerved slightly towards his left and then collided with the other automobile which was travelling side by side with the former, and which ran over him, and fatally injured him, he dying a few hours after-wards in one of the clinics of the city of Ponce in consequence of the injuries sustained, leaving as presumptive beneficiaries his legitimate wife, Mrs. Eduvigis Guillot, a minor son born out of his marriage with the latter and named Lester Agustín, and his mother, Doña Damiana Garcia.”

It then examined the pleadings of the appellants, and analyzed the decisions cited by the latter and other decisions which it considered as applicable, and finally stated its conclusions in the following terms:

“It is our opinion that, in accordance with the facts before us and the study we have made, the accident in which Agustín García [661]*661was killed was one of the current sort or of common occurrence on the public highways and belongs to the class known as ‘street accidents’, as to which this Industrial Commission has repeatedly held adversely to the contention that they are covered by the Workmen’s Compensation Act. ... In all of them the Industrial Commission has considered accidents sustained by workmen on public roads, whether the same are called highways or municipal streets, while travelling to the place of their work or returning from the latter to their homes, but outside the place or location of their employment and without the risks peculiar to such public ways being incidental to the work performed by them.”

A reconsideration of that decision was requested and upon the same being denied, an appeal was taken to this court.

In discussing the errors which they attribute to the commission, the petitioners lay special emphasis on the place where the accident occurred and on two judicial decisions: one of the Supreme Court of the United States and another of the Supreme Court of Alabama.

As regards the place, we have already adverted to the finding made by the commission. Let us see whether .or not, in the light of the law in force in this island which prescribes that its provisions shall be applied to all such workmen and employees who suffer injury, are disabled, or lose their lives by reason of accidents caused by any act or function inherent in their work or employment, when such accidents occur in the course of said work or employment and as a consequence thereof, the said decisions are applicable.

That of the Supreme Court is Bountiful Brick Co. v. Giles, 276 U. S. 154, 72 L. ed. 508,. The doctrine therein laid down is as follows:

“Liability may constitutionally be imposed under a workmen’s compensation law where there was a causal connection between the injury suffered by an employee and the employment in which he was engaged at the time, substantially contributing to the injury.
“If the employee be injured while passing, with the express or implied consent of the employer, to or from his work over the [662]*662premises of another in such proximity and relation to the premises of the employer as to be in practical effect a part of them, the injury is one arising out of and in the course of the employment as much as though it had happened while the employee was engaged in his work at the place of its performance.

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60 P.R. 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guillot-v-industrial-commission-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1942.