Judson Manufacturing Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission
This text of 184 P. 1 (Judson Manufacturing Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Certiorari to review the action of the Industrial Accident Commission in awarding compensation for the death of one Felice Gallia, who, on April 1, 1918, was struck and killed by an engine operated by the Southern Pacific Company while he was pursuing his way to work along a path crossing the latter’s tracks.
Gallia was a laborer in the employ of the Judson Manufacturing Company, his duties consisting in attending an open-hearth furnace. The furnace and factory of the company are situated on the east shore of San Francisco Bay. The premises are bounded on the west by the bay shore and on the east by the right of way on which the Southern Pacific Company maintains numerous tracks for its through and local trains. A path crossing this right of way and leading from the end of a public street at its eastern extremity directly to the gate of the factory yard at its western extremity was the sole means of ingress and egress for the employees of the Judson Manufacturing Company to and from its factory and furnace. It was, moreover, the means of access required and authorized by the company. This path was not a public highway. 'The crossing was, in fact, dominant as to user in the employer, servient to its purposes, and intimately associated with its plant as a part of its necessary establishment. The company had, indeed, even claimed a lawful easement over the crossing for the purposes of the plant. At the time of his injury and death, which occurred about five minutes before the beginning of his shift, Gallia was proceeding from his residence to the factory and had reached a point on *302 the path in question about twenty feet east of the factory gate.
The Industrial Accident Commission found that Gallia’s death resulted from an injury arising out of his employment and received while he was performing a service growing out of, incidental to, and in the course of that employment. Petitioner insists that the facts do not support the finding.
There have been a great number of cases in other jurisdictions in which the question here involved has been discussed— namely, as to the point at which a person who has been injured while away from his actual place of work leaves his employment. The line is a" very fine one. (Mole v. Wadworth, 6 B. W. C. C. 129; Richards v. Morris [1915], 1 K. B. 221; Gane v. Norton Hill Co., 2 B. W. C. C. 42 ; Moore v. Manchester Liners, 3 B. W. C. C. 527; In re Sundine, 218 Mass. 1, [L. R. A. 1916A, 318, 105 N. E. 433], in which compensation was awarded. De Constantin v. Public Service Com., 75 W. Va. 32, [L. R. A. 1916A, 329, 83 S. E. 88]; Nelson R. Constr. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com. of Ill., 286 Ill. 632, [122 N. E. 113]; Ocean Accident etc. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., *303 173 Cal. 313, [L. R. A. 1917B, 336, 159 Pac. 1041], in which compensation was denied).
In the case last cited we find a statement to the effect that all those accidental injuries which occur while the employee is going to or returning from his work are excluded from the benefits of the act. This sweeping dictum was not necessary to the decision of the case. The accident there considered occurred, it is true, while the deceased was attempting to reach his place of employment, but the mode of ingress which he undertook to use was not one provided and required by his employer; it was in no sense a part of the premises where his work was to be performed; and, finally, it was not in fact a mode of ingress to his work at all.
As remarked by Lord Loreburn in Walters v. Staveley Co., 4 B. W. C. C. 305: “In applying this act one has to look to the words of the act itself. . . . Other cases are only useful as illustrations of the way in which these words are applied, and nothing, I think, is more fruitless than to attempt to argue by analogy from one set of facts to another set of facts.” This very danger is illustrated by the citation of that case in support of the dictum in the Ocean Accident etc. Co. case. It appears from a careful reading of the opinions of their lordships that their decision in the Walters case was rested solely upon the ground that the contract of employment there involved did not contemplate the use of the pathway where the injury occurred as a necessary incident to gaining access to the place of employment. The facts, in other words, failed to show that as between the company and its employees the path was in fact a part of the company’s plant. Gilmour v. Dorman Co., 4 B. W. C. C. 279, also cited in the Ocean Accident etc. Co. case, is similarly distinguishable from the case at bar. On the other hand, it appears from Moore v. Manchester Liners, supra, and from other cases cited by the court in the Ocean Accident etc. Co. case, as well as from the additional cases which we have cited (supra), that an injury due to the necessary means of access to the ¿mployer’s premises, required by the employer and contemplated in the employment, is compensable.
The award is affirmed.
Wilbur, J., Angellotti, C. J., Lawlor, J., and Olney, J., concurred.
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184 P. 1, 181 Cal. 300, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judson-manufacturing-co-v-industrial-accident-commission-cal-1919.