Hayes v. Alabama By-Products Corporation

5 So. 2d 624, 242 Ala. 148, 1942 Ala. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1942
Docket6 Div. 906.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 So. 2d 624 (Hayes v. Alabama By-Products Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Alabama By-Products Corporation, 5 So. 2d 624, 242 Ala. 148, 1942 Ala. LEXIS 6 (Ala. 1942).

Opinion

*150 THOMAS, Justice.

This action arises under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Alabama.

The decree of the circuit court denying appellant compensation for the death of her son Talford Hayes was entered June 30, 1941. The case comes here on writ of certiorari.

The question before this court is whether an accident arises out of and in the course of employment when it occurs after the employee has quit work for the day and has left the premises where his services are rendered and while he is in the process of taking a shower at a boarding ¡house leased and operated by a third 'person who permits ■ the employee to bathe there for one dollar a month.

Hayes was employed as a supplyman in the Company’s No. 7 mine at Praco. He worked a regular shift of seven hours beginning at ten o’clock at night and ending at 5 o’clock in the morning. Shortly before 10 o’clock he was required to check in at the camp lamp house and receive his mine lamp. From there he would go to the timber yard where his day’s work began. His work consisted of loading timber on a tram trip at the timber yard, riding the loaded trip into the mine, and unloading the timber at various timber yards-'inside the mine. His day’s employment terminated at five o’clock in the morning. At that time he would catch a man-trip to the mouth of the mine from whence he walked to the lamp house, where he deposited his lamp, and checked off duty. He had no further services to perform for the company after he checked out at the-lamp house.

The company provided no bathing facilities for its employees, had no requirement that they bathe, and made no effort to regulate the time or the place they bathed. This, it is urged, was the scope of his employment.

On the morning of the accident Hayes: quit work at five o’clock, caught a man-trip, deposited his lamp at the lamp house,, and checked off duty. After leaving the lamp house, he walked to the small shower-house behind Benson’s boarding house, which is about 612 feet from the same and while he was undressing in this shower-house, preparing to take a bath, the hot water tank for the shower exploded and scalded him. This accident occurred about five-thirty on the morning of January 26, 1939, and the said Hayes died the following day.

The ownership of and operation of the shower-house in question is without dispute. It is stated that the said shower-house is a small frame structure located in the back yard of a large dwelling which was leased from the company by Jim Benson in December, 1933. Benson’s house is one of about 800 company houses located at Praco and is on company property. Benson pays the defendant a flat monthly rental for the premises. At the time Benson moved in there was no shower in the frame outhouse. There is evidence in the showing by Arthur Harbin and C.: M.. Flandley that several years previous to the time when Benson moved in, there had been shower equipment in the outhouse: The trial court stated, however, that in its opinion there was no dispute in the evidence that this equipment had been removed prior to the time of Benson’s lease, who, at his own expense and without consulting or informing defendant of his actions, installed the shower. He purchased the hot water tank from Sears Roebuck, used pipe in its installation which he had brought with him to Praco from a mine *151 he formerly operated near Tuscaloosa, and began operating the shower-house. Houston Eddins, the company plumber or pipe-man, assisted Benson in installing the said equipment. Subsequent to the installation of the equipment, Eddins has repaired it several times and was paid for said repairs by Benson.

Benson buys the coal used in heating the shower water, provides the labor for building the fire in the water heater and uses water furnished him by the company under his lease of the premises.

At the request of some of the miners who lived outside of Praco, Benson permitted them to use the shower for a dollar per month and at the time of the accident there were five or six of these outside men, including Hayes, using the shower. As to this the record recites that:

“Mr. Locke. Do you admit that the five or six men that were bathing there were all employees of the company and going there for their baths after they got out of the mine ?
“Mr. DeBardeleben. Yes, sir, paying a dollar a month for the privilege, and were, in addition to Benson’s boarders who boarded with him, using the bath house.
“Mr. Locke. And they were regularly employed in the mines and bathed there?
“Mr. DeBardeleben. Yes, sir.
“Mr. Locke. And you had the other bath houses?
“Mr. DeBardeleben. We have testimony the company provides no bathing facilities at all.
“Mr. Locke. The company had permitted these bathing places at different places?
“Mr. DeBardeleben. I don’t know what you mean by ‘permitted.’ The company hadn’t refused to allow them—
“Mr. Locke. The company knew they were operating and interposed no objections ?
“Mr. DeBardeleben. That is true. We are also going to give testimony eighty five per cent of the miners employed at this mine bathed at their own homes at the time of the accident to Hayes, and Hayes bathed at his own home until six or eight months before this accident.
“Mr. Griffin. You will also admit he left the clothes he used to work in the mines in the bath house and put on his street clothes and came back and left his street clothes and put on his work clothes?
“Mr. DeBardeleben. I don’t know whether he left his working clothes or not. * *

About six months prior to the accident Hayes made an agreement with Benson whereby he was permitted to use Benson’s shower house under the terms of this agreement at the time the accident occurred. The company exercised no supervision or control over the operation of the shower-house. Benson did not. inform the company of his actions in installing the shower equipment and in permitting five or six miners other than his roomers to use the shower-house. Benson retained the entire proceeds from the shower-house and did not account to the company therefor.

Plaintiff’s counsel admits that at the time Harbin and Weeds, the Superintendent of the company, discussed the use of the house as a bathhouse, Harbin did not work for the defendant. He testified, however, that in his best judgment the coil and heating plant for the shower were the same which were originally installed by the company while he was in charge of the bathhouse. The witness Plandley further made it plain that Plarbin had formerly operated the bathhouse and it was then known as “Benson’s Bathhouse” and when Harbin left the company’s service, Plandley discussed the operation of the bathhouse.

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Bluebook (online)
5 So. 2d 624, 242 Ala. 148, 1942 Ala. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-alabama-by-products-corporation-ala-1942.