In re Rheinwald

153 N.Y.S. 598
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 14, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 N.Y.S. 598 (In re Rheinwald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Rheinwald, 153 N.Y.S. 598 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

WOODWARD, J.

[1] I am of the opinion that the Workmen’s Compensation Law (Consol. Laws, c. 67; Laws 1913, c. 816, as reenacted and amended by Laws 1914, c. 41, and Laws-1914, c. 316), fairly construed and beneficially applied, gives right of compensation to the present claimant before the State Workmen’s Compensation Commission. The work in which Robert Rheinwald, the claimant’s husband, was engaged at the time of his death, the manner in which he was doing it, the circumstances under which he came to be doing it, and the relation which his work bore to the business carried on by the respondent Builders’ Brick & Supply Company, combine to bring within the scope of the statute his accidental and mortal injury in the course of that work, and entitle his widow and surviving children to the compensation which the law contemplates shall be paid to them when occupational mishap cuts off the wage-earnings on which they were dependent for support. The Workmen’s Compensation Law must in fairness be deemed to have been enacted in furtherance of a legislative determination, enforced by explicit mandate of the people through amendment of the state Constitution, that a new and different scheme and basis of indemnity for industrial accidents should be adopted in this state, in the light of the social experience of other commonwealths and countries. Injuries sustained by those who perform the manual and mechanical tasks of an industry must be deemed to have been intended by this statute to be made a social risk, a liability of the industry, a [601]*601charge upon the production cost of the article manufactured or the service rendered.

Hitherto the rule of our statute and fundamental law had been that any right of recovery for industrial accidents must arise from a breach of the master’s duty as to care and safeguards, and accordingly was limited by whatever contractual relation existed between the person injured and the person whose breach of duty was the efficient cause of injury. For this historic concept of liability springing from omission of legal duty created by contractual relation there has been substituted an application of the social principle that, regardless of duty and regardless of fault, the expenses and loss of earnings resultant from occupational injury to a workman engaged in carrying on an inherently hazardous business or avocation of an employer should be paid in the first instance by the employer and by him made a charge against the operating costs of the business. In place of the traditional juristic rule that the master must respond in damages when his servant is injured through the master’s fault, and that otherwise the servant must go unrecompensed and the loss be borne by him alone, the people and Legislature have now put in force the changed concept that the trade product should be charged with all consequences of inherent trade hazards, and that losses to individual workers, through disability while engaged in the service of the proprietor of the business, should be distributed among all its consumers or patrons, rather than left to operate ruinously against the disabled employé or the solitary employer. This mandate of the fundamental will of the people of this state should be remediably applied and beneficially enforced by the State Workmen’s Compensation Commission and by the courts, in fair fulfillment of the legislative purpose, and ought not now to be hampered or crippled by continued application of definitions, concepts, and rules of liability which indubitably produced in large part the very conditions of hardship for which the present statute was designed as comprehensive relief.

For these and consequent reasons, I am convinced that the learned majority of the State Workmen’s Compensation Commission were in error in ruling that Robert Rheinwald was not, at the time of the injury which caused his death, an “employé” within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, and a worker entitled to claim its benefits. The facts of the present case are hardly controverted, but its issues are of vital importance to the efficiency of the plan of compensation created by the statute and the extent to which its administration will be able to fulfill the purposes for which it was enacted. At or about noon on July 1, 1914, Robert Rheinwald, the husband of the claimant, was at work on a scaffold on one of the outside walls of a 3%-story brick stable owned by the Builders’ Brick & Supply Company, at 172d street and West Farms Road, in the borough of the Bronx, city of New York. For ten years he had been by trade a painter, especially a painter of signs, and on July 1st he was at work repainting a large sign which he had himself painted on this building wall several years before. In some accidental manner, not explained by the record, he slipped from the scaffold or it gave way, and he fell to the ground, received a fractured skull and other mortal injuries, and died a few minutes later.

[602]*602Several months before his death there had gone into effect in this state the Workmen’s Compensation Law (Consol. Laws, c. 67; Laws 1913, c. 816, as re-enacted and amended by Laws 1914, c. 41, and Laws 1914, c. 316), which declares that the “compensation” provided for therein “shall be payable for injuries sustained or death incurred by employes engaged in the following hazardous employments: * * * Group 42. * * * Painting. * * * ” The statute further provides that “ ‘employé’ means a person who is engaged in a hazardous employment in the service of an employer carrying on or conducting the same upon the premises or at the plant, or in the course of his employment away from the plant of his employer, and shall not, include farm laborers or domestic servants.” “Employer” is defined to mean “a person, * * * corporation, * * * employing workmen in hazardous employments”; and “employment” is stated to include “employment only in a trade, business or occupation carried on by the employer for pecuniary gain.” Section 3, subds. 3, 4, and 5. The Builders’ Brick & Supply Company, as its name indicates, was in the business of manufacturing and selling brick and other building materials, and the sign in question was one of its methods of advertising that business. Consequently it cannot be gainsaid that the painting or repainting of this sign would, if performed by an “employé,” be a “hazardous employment,” that painting or repainting such a sign would,, if performed by an “employé,” be employment “in a * * * business * * * carried on by the employer for pecuniary gain,” and that the death of an “employé” as the result of accidental injury in the course of such painting or repainting would entitle the widow and surviving children of the deceased to the compensation provided by the statute. Section 3, subds. 7, 8.

The Workmen’s Compensation Law further provides that “every employer subject to the provisions of this chapter shall pay or provide, as required by this chapter, compensation according to the schedules of this article for the disability or death of his employé resulting from an accidental personal injury sustained by the employé arising out of and in the course of his employment, without regard to fault as a cause” thereof. Section 10. The following section stipulates that “the liability prescribed by the last section shall be exclusive,” except that, in the event an employer fails “to secure the payment of compensation for his injured employés and * * * dependents” by one of the three methods enumerated in section 50 of the act, the employé has the option of compensation under the act or suit at law against an employer shorn of common-law defenses. Section 11.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.Y.S. 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rheinwald-nyappdiv-1915.