Matter of McCarter v. Larock

148 N.E. 523, 240 N.Y. 282, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 730
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 148 N.E. 523 (Matter of McCarter v. Larock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of McCarter v. Larock, 148 N.E. 523, 240 N.Y. 282, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 730 (N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

Hiscock, Ch. J.

This appeal in effect presents the question whether our Workmen’s Compensation Act is to be interpreted as furnishing a species of insurance *284 against all injuries received in the course of employment or whether it is to be interpreted as meaning that there must be a traceable,, causal connection between the employment and the risk which has caused the injuries other than mere location of the employee.

While the claimant was at work, on a building being erected by his employer a shell which had been preserved on adjoining premises as a souvenir of the war exploded and flying fragments not only injured him but killed other people and the decisive question is whether this was an accidental injury “ arising out of * * * employment.” It seems to the majority of the court that it was not. They believe that the provision of the statute that the injuries must arise out of the employment means that the employment in a reasonable sense must lead to the injuries and requires that there shall be some perceptible, causal connection between the employment and the accident causing the injuries. There was not in our judgment in any true sense any such connection.

Nobody argues that this accident could have been foreseen or anticipated; nobody claims that the work being performed produced the explosion and accident or that it subjected the workman to a risk known beforehand or, as seen after the event, either peculiarly or generally incidental to the employment. It was an accident absolutely detached from and foreign to his employment. The fact that the explosion happened upon the adjoining premises is of no consequence in the theory urged for affirming the award, for, if that theory is correct, the explosion might just as well have happened half a mile away. The only supposed relation between the employment and the accident and the sole basis for upholding an .award, as we understand it, is that if the claimant had not been working on this particular house he would not have been hit by a fragment of the shell. The theory for upholding an award, therefore, becomes the naked one that if an accident happens causing injury to a *285 workman because by reason of his employment he was in the place where he was, the necessary relationship between accident and employment is established and the accident is to be regarded as one arising out of the employment. We have thus far found ourselves unable to give that interpretation to our statute. No matter how finely we may have shaded the meaning of words and liberally interpreted the statute in order to uphold awards, this court thus far has definitely and consistently refused to adopt the interpretation of the statute now being urged, and a few cases will be referred to for the purpose of showing not only by what was said in the opinions but by the decisions themselves that we have insisted that there must be some connection between accident and employment other than a mere physical location of the employee which placed him in the pathway of a cause producing injuries, no matter where or how that cause originated.

In the earliest cases the court, accustomed and still influenced perhaps by the principles governing responsibility for negligence, gave importance to the obligation of reasonable anticipation of the accident. (Matter of Waters v. Taylor Co., 218 N. Y. 248.) In later decisions we undoubtedly have modified this requirement but we have nevertheless held "that even though the accident was not to be anticipated it must nevertheless be one between which and the employment there appeared a causative connection.

Matter of Heitz v. Ruppert (218 N. Y. 148) perhaps may be regarded as the fundamental decision in this court dealing with this question and prescribing the rule which must govern its solution. In that case injuries arose as the result of an altercation between two fellow-servants following a reproof -administered by one to the other. The injuries clearly sprang out of the employment in which the two men were engaged and were fairly incidental thereto. Judge Pound in behalf of the court writing an opinion *286 sustaining an award said: “ The injury must be received (1) while the workman is doing the duty he is employed to perform, and also (2) as a natural incident of the work. It must be one of the risks connected with the employment, flowing therefrom as a natural consequence and directly connected with the work.” And again: The evidence in this case is sufficient to permit the commission to find that the following facts sought to be proved were established: that it was an obligation of claimant’s employment to take care of the horses which he drove and to see that they were not injured by injudicious wetting or otherwise by his fellow-workmen; that in the course of their employment ■ — while the two men were at work — a quarrel or argument over the wetting of the horses arose and personal injury grew out of the physical contact resulting from the quarrel, and that, therefore, the accident (a) arose out of * * * employment.”

In Matter of Kowalek v. N. Y. Consol. Ry. Co. (229 N. Y. 489, 494), where an employee was killed when leaving his day’s employment, we refused to uphold an award, saying: An injury does not arise out of the employment unless the hazard causing it is, within rational apprehension, an attribute of or peculiar to the specific duties of the employment. The fact that the contract of employment exists .and necessitates the acts of performance may or will occasion for the employee risks not reasonably incidental to the chararacter of the work or employment. For the injuries caused by or flowing from those risks the statute does not direct or permit compensation.” And as especially applicable to the theory advanced in this case, This conclusion is not affected by the fact that the employee would not, except for the employment, have been where such danger or hazard existed.” '

In Matter of DeSalvo v. Jenkins (239 N. Y. 531) the claimant while at his post of duty as a night watchman was injured by a shot from an air gun accidentally discharged *287 on the premises. We held that the injuries arose from an accident which was in no manner connected with or incidental to claimant’s employment and necessarily we held that the claimant was not entitled to an award simply because his employment took him to the place where he was and placed him in the course of the shot accidentally discharged.

In Matter of Leonbruno v. Champlain Silk Mills (229 N. Y. 470, 471) we held that the claimant was entitled to an award for injuries caused by an apple thrown by a fellow-employee while engaged in horseplay in the factory where they were working. We did so, however, with express recognition of the necessity for a reasonable connection between the employment and the accident, saying, through Judge Cardozo : The claimant’s presence in a factory in association with other workmen involved exposure to the risk of injury from the careless acts of those about him.

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.E. 523, 240 N.Y. 282, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-mccarter-v-larock-ny-1925.