MacKenzie v. Oregon Short Line Railroad

33 P.2d 113, 54 Idaho 481
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1934
DocketNo. 6095
StatusPublished

This text of 33 P.2d 113 (MacKenzie v. Oregon Short Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacKenzie v. Oregon Short Line Railroad, 33 P.2d 113, 54 Idaho 481 (Idaho 1934).

Opinions

WERNETTE, J.

This proceeding was instituted by respondent, Jessie MacKenzie, to recover compensation for the death of her husband. On June 9, 1932, and for some years prior thereto Niel MacKenzie, deceased, had been employed by appellant, Oregon Short Line Railroad Company, in the operation of a generator plant in which acetylene gas was generated and conducted by pipes to the various shops of appellant company in its yards at Pocatello, Idaho. At the side of the generator plant building there was located a sump or sludge pit into which the refuse from the generators was carried by means of a concrete conduit from the inside of the building. For a period of about nine years, and up until November, 1931, it had always been a part of Mac-Kenzie’s duties to clean out the sludge pit at intervals of about one month, which cleaning work was done by running water and steam into the pit from the generator plant, and [484]*484then siphoning the softened refuse into a ear on a near-by track. The work of MaeKenzie in operating the generator plant and cleaning the sludge pit was under the supervision of the mechanical department of the appellant company. In November, 1931, the store department of the appellant company was directed to take over the work of cleaning the sludge pit. From that time on, and until the date of the accident, June 9, 1932, it appears that a man from the store department always handled the work of cleaning the pit, under the supervision of the foreman of the store department. The hose that was used to run the water into the sludge pit, on the occasions when.it was cleaned, was kept inside of the generating plant and the faucet controlling the flow. of water was inside of the plant. It had been the custom of the man cleaning the pit after November, 1931, to have MaeKenzie assist him in passing the hose out of the building to the pit, and then having MaeKenzie turn the water on. On the day in question, June 9, 1932, MaeKenzie had assisted the man who was doing the cleaning, but only in the particulars stated. When the store department assumed the task of cleaning the pit it changed the method used by discontinuing the use of the siphon and installing a pump. The first pump that had been used proved to be too small to handle the work satisfactorily, so shortly before the date of the accident a larger pump had been substituted to handle the work. On the day -in question, after the man from the store department had started cleaning the pit, MaeKenzie came out of the generator plant and talked with him a minute or tw-o about how the pump was operating, glanced into the pit and returned to the inside of the building. Approximately an hour later the operator of the pump noticed that it was in need of oil and left the place for a period of about five minutes to go to the oil-house for some oil. While he was away MaeKenzie came out of the building, passed the pump and stepped on to the back of one of the trap-doors turned back from the opening into the sludge pit. The back side of the open trap-door was covered with slime and, as a result, MaeKenzie’s feet slipped and he [485]*485fell into the pit. The sludge had been thinned with water and heated by the steam, so that when MaeKenzie fell into the pit and was submerged in the refuse and water he suffered a burn covering about eighty per cent of his body. On the same date, June 9, 1932, MaeKenzie died as a result of the accident so sustained. The appellant refused to allow compensation, on the ground that the accident did not arise out of and in the course of deceased’s employment. On hearing before the Industrial Accident Board that body allowed compensation, finding that the death of Niel Mac-Kenzie “was the result of personal injuries by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment.” On appeal to the district court the award of the board was affirmed, and the judgment affirming the award is now before us for review.

There is but one real question for decision in this case: Did the accident which caused. the death of the deceased, Niel MaeKenzie, arise out of and in the course of his employment ?

Appellant has made various assignments of error, but the answer to this one question is decisive. Appellant tabes the position that the deceased had been relieved of his duty of cleaning the sludge pit several months prior to the time that he met his death; that on the 9th day of June, when he slipped and fell into the pit, which caused his death, he was not performing any duty in connection with his employment, but came to the pit solely for the purpose of satisfying his own personal curiosity, and not while he was reasonably fulfilling the duties of his employment or something incidental to it. That portion of the findings of fact of the board, which are pertinent and material to a determination of the question before us, are:

“V.

“ .... that after the emptying of said pit or sump was taken over by the ‘store department’ it was the custom of Neil MaeKenzie, now deceased, to help the laborer to whom was assigned the task of emptying the pit, to pass the rubber hose out through the opened doors and to turn on the water; [486]*486that because the task of emptying the said pit or sump had been his duty prior to the time the emptying was taken over by the said ‘store department’ and because the method of emptying was changed, the said Neil Mackenzie, now deceased, always was greatly interested in observing the method used and its efficiency; that the laborer while emptying the tank with the pump had more or less trouble with the pump and on such occasions would tell said Mackenzie that it ‘was not doing so good.’

“VI.

“That on the 9th day of June 1932, the laborer of the employer, Oregon Shortline Kailroad Company, to whom the task of emptying the pit was usually assigned, was instructed to empty the pit; that he thereupon opened the two trap doors over the east half of the said pit by laying them bottom up on top of the doors covering the west half and with the assistance of the said Neil Mackenzie, now deceased, put the water hose into the pit and had the said Mackenzie turn on the water, turned'the steam into the pit and started the pump and proceeded to empty the pit; that after the pump had run for some time the said Neil MacKenzie, now deceased, came out of the generator building toward the sump and talked with the said laborer for a minute or two about how it was working, looked at the sump and then returned to the generator building; that at said time the pump was located west of the sludge tank, opposite the trap door covering the southwest quarter of the tank and its runner just touching the west walls of the tank; that after said pump had been operating about an hour it became dry for want of lubrication and started to jump and jerk and in order to get oil to lubricate the pump the said laborer left it operating and went to get some oil at an oil house which was located at a distance of about fifty yards from the generator plant and on said errand was gone for a period of more than five minutes; that during the time the said laborer was away from the pump on his errand the said Neil Mackenzie, now deceased, came out of the generator building, went toward or by the running pump, stepped on the trap [487]

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Bluebook (online)
33 P.2d 113, 54 Idaho 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackenzie-v-oregon-short-line-railroad-idaho-1934.