Kropf v. Michigan Bean Co.

179 N.W. 276, 211 Mich. 454, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 710
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1920
DocketDocket No. 64
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 N.W. 276 (Kropf v. Michigan Bean 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
Kropf v. Michigan Bean Co., 179 N.W. 276, 211 Mich. 454, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 710 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Moore, C. J.

The Michigan Bean Company on March 17, 1919, had a warehouse and long dock on the banks of the St. Clair river at Port Huron. Jacob [455]*455Kropf had been employed by the Michigan Bean Company as a nightwatchman and janitor for about 3% years prior to March 17, 1919. On- March 17, 1919, the foreman for the company upon coming to work about 6:30 a. m. found the lights about the plant still burning and Jacob Kropf had disappeared. He had punched his watchman’s clock at about 4:40 or 4:50 a. m., and had placed the clock in its usual place in the office of the Michigan Bean Company.. April 30, 1919, Mr. Kropf’s body was found in the river two miles below defendant’s dock. A claim was made by plaintiff and an award was made in her favor. This proceeding is certiorari to review that award. It is conceded that, if there is any liability, the award should not be disturbed.

The claim of the appellants is tersely stated in a brief by their counsel as follows:

“There is no evidence in the record which would warrant a finding that his death was in any manner due to an accidental personal injury received in the course of his employment; that there is no evidence in the record which would indicate an accidental personal injury arising out of his employment, that the manner in which he came to his death is a matter of conjecture only; that the facts which are proved upon the record are as consistent with the non-liability of the defendants under the compensation act as with the liability, that the only conclusion that can be legitimately drawn from the evidence is that the man was fishing at the time he fell into the river. * * *
“The attention of this honorable court is invited to the fact that snagging herring is an active process, involving the jerking up through a school of herring of a line to which are attached a number of hooks; that a man to do this ordinarily would stand upon his feet and would move rapidly. It is the defendants’ theory that the deceased, at the time he fell into the river, had snagged some herring on his hooks and, as is quite usual, doubting whether his pole was strong enough to lift the fish to the dock, reached over and seized the fish line below the end of the pole in his [456]*456hand for the purpose of lifting his catch to the dock. It is believed by the" defendants that in this act he lost his balance and fell into the river, and it is submitted that this is a highly feasible explanation; certainly much more feasible than that the deceased went to the edge of the dock to empty a pail of dirt with a fish pole in his hand (the pail being later found sitting upright several feet from the edge of the dock), or that he went out on the dock to perform some unknown duty, carrying a fish pole in his hand for some unknown reason.”

Counsel cites in support of his contention Ginsberg v. Adding Machine Co., 204 Mich. 130; Chaudier v. Lumber Co., 206 Mich. 433, and other Michigan cases.

It may be well here to call attention to what is said in the return of the industrial accident board. We quote part of it:

“The decedent’s work as nightwatchman called him on duty at 7 p. m. and relieved him from duty at 5:30 a. m. His duties during this time were to clean up the office, warehouse and elevator, keep up the fires in furnaces, and make the rounds of ten or twelve watch stations once each hour, ringing up the hours on his watchman’s clock with the keys placed at the respective stations.
“On the morning of March 17, 1919, he rang up his last station as required on the clock, between 4:40 and 4:50. From that time nothing was known of him until his body was found floating in St. Clair river, a considerable distance down the river from the dock of the Michigan Bean Company.
“On the night and morning of March 17, 1919, there was a very dense fog on the river, making the dock very wet and slippery and objects not discernible, even at a distance of two feet away.
“When the body of decedent was recovered on April 30, 1919, it was found his watch had stopped at 4:58 o’clock, about eight minutes after the last station was recorded on the watch clock.
“It was one of his last duties to turn off the lights on the dock and outside of the buildings. These were controlled by a switch located in the office of the D. & [457]*457C. Boat Company, a few feet away from the edge of the dock, which lights were found to be on when the workmen arrived at the Michigan Bean Company on the morning of March 17, 1919.
“The habits of the decedent were exemplary and he was painstaking and industrious in the discharge of his duty.
“To sustain their contention that the accident did not arise out of and in the course of the employment of the deceased, the respondents rely upon- the theory that the decedent had left his employ and was fishing off the dock, when he met his death.
“It appears from the proofs that after the decedent was missed, his overcoat, undercoat, glasses and several small herring wrapped up in a newspaper were found on a table in the office; that a pail which the decedent was accustomed to using about his work was found standing near the edge of the dock a short distance from one of the stations to which it was necessary for this decedent in the course of his employment to go. * * *
“The respondent (decedent) was missed early on the morning of March 17, 1919. He was last seen while performing his duties upon the premises of the respondent. On April 30th following his body was taken from the river some distance below the respondent’s premises. When the body was recovered a jointed bamboo fish pole was attached to the body. A line connected to the pole being wrapped around the decedent’s arm. Some witnesses testify this pole is the previously mentioned pole which had been kept about the premises. There seems to have been no identification marks about this pole by which the witnesses would be able to distinguish it other than a piece of bag string which had been used to fasten it together at the joint so that a section might not be lost in case the pole came apart. There is considerable testimony in the record to the effect that many jointed bamboo poles were sold and used in this vicinity of the same make and appearance as the pole in question and that it was not unusual for such poles to be tied together at the joints for the purpose of nreventing the loss of a section.
“The body when recovered had on' overalls and [458]*458smock of the deceased which he wore when about his work.
“The fish which were found wrapped up in a paper upon careful inspection by a number of witnesses showed that they had no wound upon them as they would have had if they had been caught with a hook in the manner which herring are caught. It appears by the testimony that herring are caught either in a seine or net, or by what is known as snagging. It appears by the proofs that if these fish had been caught by snagging or with a hook as the respondents contend they would have been wounded.
“It appears by the proofs that many of the witnesses saw a pail standing near the edge of the dock and one witness connected with the respondent company claims to have seen fish scales in it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 N.W. 276, 211 Mich. 454, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kropf-v-michigan-bean-co-mich-1920.