Holloway v. Ideal Seating Co.

21 N.W.2d 125, 313 Mich. 267, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 461
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1946
DocketDocket No. 5, Calendar No. 42,891.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 125 (Holloway v. Ideal Seating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holloway v. Ideal Seating Co., 21 N.W.2d 125, 313 Mich. 267, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 461 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

Boyles, J,

The plaintiff, a minor under the age of 18 years, was allowed double compensation by the department of labor and industry for personal injury and the loss of two fingers. On leave granted, the employer appeals in the nature of certiorari and the only question involved is whether an injury to a minor under 18 years of age, in order to be compensable under the workmen’s compensation law, must arise out of and in the course of the employment. The department held that the fact that plaintiff was such a minor, illegally employed, constituted an exception to such general rule.

Plaintiff was employed by the defendant Ideal Seating Company December 9,1943, without the permit or certificate required by 2 Comp. Laws 1929, §8325 (Stat. Ann. §17.20). He was actually 14 years of age although he represented to the employer that his age was 17. The employment was unlawful. Plaintiff was put to work as a helper to the man who operated a “square shear” machine. His work consisted of helping to pick up sheets of metal and place them on the square shears. He was instructed by the foreman not to operate the machine at any time, that he (the foreman) couldn’t *270 pnt bim on any machine because he wasn’t 18. The next day plaintiff and another boy, at their own request, were permitted to change work with each other, plaintiff going to work as a helper to the operator of a punch press. His duties were to bring shell cases from welders and place them on a table adjacent to the punch press. He had been told not to operate any machine. During the course of that afternoon’s work two fingers on his left hand were injured in the punch press, resulting in later amputation. No one admitted having seen the accident. The punch press operator was in an adjacent room moving some finished shell cases and had called to plaintiff to come and help him to move the shell cases. Plaintiff, in testifying before the deputy, claimed that he slipped on some loose shell eases on the floor and that in an effort to keep from falling his left hand got into the punch press and was injured. There was proof to the contrary, that it was impossible for the injury to have been caused in that manner, and that plaintiff had told one Higley that he was operating the punch press when someone called to him and that while he was turned around he tripped the lever that caused the press to operate, without removing his hand from the shell case which was in the press. Plaintiff’s application for compensation stated that the injury happened as follows :

“Plaintiff was working on a punch press, which was shaping shells. Hand slipped in machine in the course of his employment and his left hand and fingers thereof were lacerated, bruised and cut.”

The department found the facts as to the manner in which plaintiff was injured to be as follows:

“We have reviewed the record very carefully with special emphasis on the physical set-up of the room *271 in which plaintiff was working. We are satisfied that it is highly improbable, and in fact almost impossible, that the injury occurred as plaintiff testified. If his right hand had been caught in the machine there would be reason to believe the accident happened as he now claims. If he was going toward thq opening, the machine would be on his right and to be injured as he now claims he would not only have had to trip the lever but at the same time turn around and get his left hand in the machine at that exact moment. For the indicated reasons we are definitely of the opinion that Higley’s testimony relating to what plaintiff told him very shortly after the accident accurately describes the manner in which plaintiff injured his left hand.

“We find that plaintiff was operating the punch press when he sustained the disabling injury which necessitated subsequent amputations of the first and second fingers of his right (left) hand. We further find that plaintiff had been specifically instructed by his immediate foreman at the time of his employment to leave the machines alone. We find that at the time of the injury plaintiff was violating the specific instructions previously given. ’ ’

There was material evidence to support such findings of fact and therefore we are compelled to accept the same. They establish conclusively that as a matter of law plaintiff’s injury did not arise out of and in the course of. his employment.

“If a workman is injured while voluntarily doing something quite outside the scope of the work he is employed to do, it cannot well be said that such injury ‘arises out of and in the course of his employment.’ This is illustrated by the old case of the boy who was engaged to hand balls of clay in molds to a molder, and was told not to touch the machinery; *272 but, having nothing to do for the moment, he did attempt to clean'the machinery, and was injured. It was necessarily held that the injury did not ‘arise out of and in the course of his employment.' Lowe v. Pearson, 1 W. C. C. 5 (15 T. L. R. 124). It was also held that the injury did not arise out of and in the course of the employment where a girl left her work to start an engine when the person whose particular duty it was to do so happened for the moment to be absent. Losh v. Evans & Co., 5 W. C. C. 17 (19 T. L. R. 142). * * *

“And if a workman, when there is no emergency, should, of his own volition, see fit to intermeddle with something entirely outside the work for which he is employed, he ought not to be allowed compensation upon the mere plea that he thought his act would be for the benefit of his employer. That plea may be of value under some circumstances, but it cannot authorize an employee to voluntarily take upon himself the performance of work for which he was not employed.” Bischoff v. American Car & Foundry Co., 190 Mich. 229, 233, 234.

In Ballman v. D’ Arcy Spring Co., 221 Mich. 582, the plaintiff was allowed compensation by the department of labor and industry for accidental death. In reversing the award the court said (pp. 587, 588):

“No duty in the line of his employment required Ballman to leave the plant. He went' during working hours at,his own suggestion, in the interest of Stevens or himself or both, away from the plant, to a drugstore where he got some bromo-seltzer and a bar of chocolate. In going he violated an order of his employer and was doing nothing to advance its interest.

“The rule upon that subject is thus stated in 26 Cyc. p. 1224:

“‘Where a servant voluntarily and of his own motion exposes himself to risks outside of the scope of his regular employment, without or against the *273 order of the master or vice-principal, and is injured thereby, the master is not liable.’ ”

In Grabman v. France Stone Co., 280 Mich. 292, plaintiff was awarded compensation by the department of labor and industry for the death of her husband while in the defendant’s employ. His sole duties were to load a truck and make deliveries. He undertook to grease a conveyor 40 feet above the ground, fell and thus was killed.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W.2d 125, 313 Mich. 267, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-v-ideal-seating-co-mich-1946.