Malphrus v. State Commission of Forestry & Workmen's Compensation Fund

69 S.E.2d 70, 221 S.C. 75, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 4, 1952
Docket16587
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 S.E.2d 70 (Malphrus v. State Commission of Forestry & Workmen's Compensation Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malphrus v. State Commission of Forestry & Workmen's Compensation Fund, 69 S.E.2d 70, 221 S.C. 75, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 68 (S.C. 1952).

Opinion

Baker, Chief Justice.

On May 30, 1949, C. R. Malphrus was employed by the South Carolina State Commission of Forestry, and was killed in an automobile accident on a highway in Jasper County at the intersection of Highways, S-27 and 336, about two hundred yards out from town limits of Ridgeland, to the west.

A claim for death benefits was filed with the South Carolina Industrial Commission by Mrs. Mamie W. Malphrus, widow of the deceased. At a hearing before the single Commissioner, the defendants-appellants denied that the accident which resulted in the death of Mr. Malphrus arose out of and in the course of his employment with the Forestry Commission.

On July 29, 1950, the hearing Commissioner filed his award or report sustaining the contention of the appellants, and ordered the claim dismissed.

On review by the full Commission, a majority of that body, on February 26, 1951, reversed the award or finding *78 of the hearing Commissioner, and ordered payment of death benefits; and on appeal to the Court of Common Pleas for Jasper County, that Court affirmed the award of the full Commission.

The first issue necessary to be decided by this Court is whether there is any competent testimony reasonably tending to sustain the conclusion of the full Commission that the deceased’s death arose out of and in the course of his employment. If so, then the award of the full Commission must be upheld and of course the order of the Circuit Court sustaining same, affirmed. For this postulate, citation of authority is unnecessary, but we will quote from Rudd v. Fairforest Finishing Co., 189 S. C. 188, 191, 192, 200 S. E. 727, 728: “It is a familiar formula that findings of fact by a Board or Commission on a claim under a Workmen’s Compensation Act are conclusive; and the appellate court will not review such findings except to determine whether there is any evidence to support the award. It may reverse an award if there is an absence of any evidence to support it, but it is not a trier of facts. If the facts proved are capable as a matter of law of sustaining the inferences of fact drawn from them by the Board, its findings are conclusive in the absence of fraud, and neither this Court nor the Court of Common Pleas is at liberty to interfere with them. This is but an application to Workmen’s Compensation cases of the fundamental principle universal in Courts of law, that whether there is any competent evidence is for the Court to determine, but whether the evidence is sufficient is a question for the jury; the function of the Commission being in that respect that of a jury in actions of law. While the findings of fact by the Industrial Commission will be upheld if there is any evidence on which it can rest, it must be founded on evidence, and cannot rest on surmise, conjecture or speculation. Philips v. Dixie Stores, Inc., et al., 186 S. C. 374, 195 S. E. 646; Murdaugh v. Robert Lee Const. Co., 185 S. C. 497, 194 S. E. 447; Spearman v. F. S. Royster Guano Co., 188 S. C. 393, 199 S. E. 530.”

*79 The foregoing statement of the law from the Rudd case has been quoted either partially or in full time and again since that opinion was filed.

The Forestry Commission maintained independent telephone lines to those of the lines of the telephone company operating in that section, but on occasions also used the facilities of the telephone company when lines of the Commission were out of order, and for connection with phones of the telephone company. Mr. Malphrus had been working on the Commission’s telephone line on Friday, May 27th, but did not do any work thereon on Monday, May 30th, the date of the accident. While it was not customary for Mr. Malphrus to call his immediate supervisor about the work of the Commission in the late afternoon and at night, yet he occasionally did so, and if the telephone line to his home (the line of the Commission) was out of order between Ridgeland and his home or his telephone was out of order, it was necessary for him to go to Ridgeland and telephone from there. On Monday, May 30th, it was rainy and there' had been an electric storm. Following electrical storms the line to the home of Mr. Malphrus was usually, if not always, out of order, and he would have to find the trouble, such as limbs on the wires, and eliminate it, or go to Ridgeland to phone. Mr. Malphrus was on duty all the time, and when there was a “minor interference, a ground or limb interference or something like that” he would work on the line when his immediate supervisor was not around to supervise the job. He was a fire warden — his first duty being fire protection, but he had other duties along the line of personally contacting the people in his district, and to perform the duties of a telephone linesman, to maintain or construct, whichever had to be done. On the afternoon of the accident, a daughter of Mr. Malphrus twice undertook to phone him from Ridge-land at his home, and was unable to get an answer, although her mother (the claimant) was at home and testified that the phone did not ring at any time. Just prior to Mr. Mal-phrus leaving home to make the trip on which he was killed, *80 he stated to his wife, “I am going to make a call and (will be) back in a few minutes,” and that the call was to Mr. Veigneur, his direct superior. When Mr. Malphrus was killed he was travelling the direct road from his home fi> Ridge-land, where it was necessary for him to go in order to telephone to Mr. Veigneur if the Forestry Commission line leading to his home or his telephone was out of order. Following a storm, it was customary fpr Mr. Malphrus to get in communication with Mr. Veigneur, and he would go to the central office (telephone exchange) in Ridgeland and call from there as the Forestry Commission line to his home would be out of order, although on occasions the trouble with his phone or the line would later clear itself. There is testimony that the line to Mr. Malphrus’ home could have been out of order without other portions of the line being greatly affected. Mr. Veigneur testified that the Forestry line to his home was not out of order on May 30th, but that he could not say as to the line to or the phone in the home of Mr. Malphrus; that if the line to Mr. Malphrus’ house was grounded out, it would have affected the entire Forestry line, and he could not have been reached by phone. He did not know of any reason why Mr. Malphrus would have been calling him that afternoon, but if he was going to Ridgeland to call him in reference to the work he was doing under him, it would be in the course of his. employment according to his belief. There was no work done on the Forestry line of communication on the day following the accident. There is no suggestion in the record for which there is any basis that Mr. Malphrus would have desired to talk to Mr. Veigneur about anything other than the business of the Forestry Commission.

It was the position of appellants that Mr. Malphrus was not going to Ridgeland for the purpose of phoning to his immediate superior about his work (or anything else), but was going there in order to drive his daughter, who worked in a restaurant in Ridgeland, and lived with him, home, as to which there was some testimony, though weak.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E.2d 70, 221 S.C. 75, 1952 S.C. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malphrus-v-state-commission-of-forestry-workmens-compensation-fund-sc-1952.