Howe v. Watkins Brothers

142 A. 69, 107 Conn. 640, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 16, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 142 A. 69 (Howe v. Watkins Brothers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howe v. Watkins Brothers, 142 A. 69, 107 Conn. 640, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 62 (Colo. 1928).

Opinions

Maltbie, J.

This is an appeal from the dismissal by the Superior Court of an appeal from an award to the claimant. The facts found are as follows: The de *642 fendant employers maintain at Manchester a large furniture store and in connection therewith an undertaking establishment, in which the claimant was employed as a licensed embalmer. The store is closed Thursday afternoons each week, but the undertaking establishment remains open with some one in charge to take calls. The claimant, some time prior to the date of the injury, had purchased for himself an automobile, which was registered in his name. He had an arrangement with the defendant employers that he was, on occasion, to use the car in their business and was to be paid therefor either in money or in gasoline or oil, and he had, prior to the date of the accident, on occasion used the car for them and been compensated in this way. It is the custom in the undertaking business to keep vehicles used in it in a clean and orderly condition and this rule prevailed at the defendant-employers’ establishment. On Thursday afternoon April 29th, 1926, the claimant was on duty in the undertaking establishment alone, his duty being to take any calls that might come in and do whatever might be necessary to further the defendant-employers’ interest. His automobile was in their garage in back of the establishment, for the purpose of being used in response to any calls for his services that might come in. It needed washing and in accordance with the custom prevailing in the employers’ business of keeping their vehicles clean, the claimant decided that it ought to be cleaned so that it might be presentable in responding to whatever business calls might come in. He went to the garage and washed and cleaned the car. In washing it his chief object was to have it in a clean condition for the employers’ business, which was a distinct benefit to them. While washing one of the rear fenders he cut his right index finger. This apparently slight injury became infected, due to a germ which entered through *643 the cut, resulting in a long disability. The commissioner concluded that the claimant sustained the injury while he was doing something for the benefit of his employers and that it arose out of and in the course of his employment.

The defendants sought several corrections in the finding, and all the evidence has been brought before us. Certain of the additions sought should have been made, and we add the following to the finding: The automobile in question belonged to the claimant, was registered and insured by him as a pleasure car, and had been used by him to go to and fro between his home and the place of business. At times he had it washed at a garage where the cars belonging to his employers and that of one Anderson, their assistant manager in charge of the undertaking department, were also washed; the claimant himself paid for the washing of his car, but those belonging to his employers and Anderson were paid for by the former. On Thursday afternoon of the injury there was a time when the claimant was not occupied with the business of his employers and he decided to wash the running gear of the car, although there was nothing urgent about his doing it at that time.

These additions should be made to the finding, not because in themselves they would be material in procuring a different conclusion than that at which the commissioner arrived, but because they afford a more complete picture of the situation from which to approach that portion of the motion to correct which presents the real issue in the case. The motion seeks to strike out from the finding those portions in which it is stated that the claimant, in accordance with the custom prevailing in his employers’ business of keeping their vehicles clean, decided that the car ought to be cleaned so that it might be presentable in responding *644 to whatever business calls came in, and that in washing the car his chief object was to have it in a clean condition for the employers’ business, which was a distinct benefit to them. That he was at the time in question in the course of his employment cannot be questioned, for while at the time he was not engaged in any duty pertaining to it, he was, during the period of the day when he suffered his injury, and in fact during the entire twenty-four hours of the day, subject to the call of his. employment or the order of his employers. Moreover, upon the finding it is evident that the automobile was, on the afternoon in question, so far devoted to the employers’ business that, had the claimant been injured by reason of any use to which he was putting it in furtherance of that business, it would not be possible to escape the conclusion that the injury arose out of the employment. If it is so that his purpose in washing the car was to have it presentable should he be called upon to answer any call in the business of his employers, in accordance with the custom prevailing in their business to keep their vehicles clean, and was acting for the benefit of his employers, it would be difficult to escape the same conclusion. If, on the other hand, the claimant was taking advantage of a time when the duties of his employment did not call for attention to wash the car for his own purposes, the injury could not be said to arise out of the employment. The motion to strike out the finding as to his intent and purpose, therefore reaches the heart of the case.

A finding of intent or purpose ordinarily is one of a primary fact and where it is supported by no direct evidence it is an inference drawn from all the relevant facts and circumstances presented by the evidence and is not a conclusion from subordinate facts; Goodhart v. State, 84 Conn. 60, 68, 78 Atl. 853; Luce v. Niantic Menhaden Oil & Guano Co., 86 Conn. 147, 150, 84 Atl. *645 521; and that this was the nature of the finding in this case appears from its position among the subordinate facts and not among the conclusions. We must then examine all the evidence and can correct the finding only if there is no evidence adequate to support it or reasonably justifying an inference that the facts are as therein stated. McDermott v. McDermott, 97 Conn. 31, 35, 115 Atl. 638.

In a consideration of the evidence, two circumstances cannot be overlooked. One is that the report of the accident made by the representative of the employers to the insurance company gave as the cause of the injury, “infection apparently from his undertaking work.” Apparently it was only when an examination of the record as to the bodies he had embalmed prior to the injury failed to disclose any work he had done from which the infection could have come that attention was centered upon the scratch he had received while washing the car. The other circumstance is the very evident desire of the assistant manager of the defendant-employers, in charge of the undertaking department, who testified in behalf of the claimant, to do all he could to assist in securing him compensation, a compensation which must be paid, not by the employers, but by the insurance company. These facts tend definitely to destroy any favorable inferences which might arise from the testimony of these two men, upon which the claimant’s case in the respect we are considering almost wholly depends.

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Bluebook (online)
142 A. 69, 107 Conn. 640, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-watkins-brothers-conn-1928.