N. P. R. R. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Comm.

163 P. 1000, 174 Cal. 297, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 790
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1917
DocketS. F. No. 7651.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 163 P. 1000 (N. P. R. R. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Comm.) 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.

Bluebook
N. P. R. R. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Comm., 163 P. 1000, 174 Cal. 297, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 790 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

Charles A. Bowdish was in the employ of the petitioner as chief clerk of its freight auditing department. His duties, as the title of his position indicates, were clerical, and for the most part were performed in the city and county *Page 298 of San Francisco, where are located the main offices of the company. The company also employed traveling agents, who inspected and corrected the books of local freight agents, and instructed them in the proper keeping thereof. Occasionally Mr. Bowdish was called upon to perform like work. In February, 1914, it appeared that the local agent of the company at Ukiah, a city on one of its lines of railway, was experiencing difficulty in making up his books of account, and Mr. Bowdish was instructed to go to Ukiah, over the railroad of petitioner, and there to aid the local agent in overcoming his bookkeeping difficulties. Mr. Bowdish, in the performance of his duty, left San Francisco in the afternoon of September 14th. In its progress his train arrived at a station known as Asti at about 6:30 P. M. It was dark and raining. As the train was leaving Asti station one Hagemeyer attempted to board it, slipped, fell, and was seriously injured. The train was immediately brought to a stop and aid given to the injured man. In rendering this aid Mr. Hagemeyer was placed upon a stretcher at the scene of his accident, the train was backed down to that point so that the stretcher could be lifted and placed in the baggage-car. This having been done, the conductor and his brakeman shouted the warning signals to the passengers, who had gathered about the scene of the accident, to embark as the train was about to start. The engineer gave the customary signals, the passengers and trainmen boarded the train, and the train got under headway. As it was thus leaving the station for the second time, a brakeman who was standing on the rear platform of the first passenger coach following the baggage-car, prepared to close the vestibule. He heard a noise on the steps below him, and looking down noticed a large, heavy man attempting to jump aboard the moving train. His hands slipped from the side bar, and before the train could be stopped he had fallen between the two cars and was so badly injured that he died almost immediately. This man was Charles A. Bowdish. Application by his widow and minor children was made to the Industrial Accident Commission for an award on account of the death thus sustained. An award was granted and petitioner has sued out this writ of review.

The facts above stated are not in controversy. To justify any award it must be established that the death resulted "from accidental personal injury sustained by the employee, *Page 299 arising out of and in the course of his employment." Petitioner contends, first, that no word of evidence establishes this fundamental proposition; and, second, that the findings, in so far as they declare to this effect, are wholly unsupported by the evidence. The findings of the commission upon this point are as follows:

"On the day in question the deceased had been ordered by his employer to proceed to Ukiah for the purpose of checking up the accounts at that station, and in pursuance of such order he was riding on a train of the defendant, his transportation for that purpose having been supplied by the defendant. Just as the train left Asti, it ran over and injured a man, and when it stopped, on account of such accident, the deceased alighted from the train, and without orders or request from the conductor or train crew. Upon signal being given by the conductor for the train to proceed, said deceased, after the train had started, attempted to board the same, and in some manner his hold slipped and he fell under the wheels, and was almost instantly killed.

"That the act of said employee in alighting from the train as aforesaid was a natural and reasonable act upon the part of any person traveling upon business of an employer, and was not such a departure from the course of the duties of his employment as to take him outside of the protection given by the Workmen's Compensation, Insurance and Safety Act to employees traveling upon the business of their employment; further that the act of the deceased in alighting from the train, thereby to be available in case his services should be useful, was a portion of his implied duties as an employee of the defendant, and, therefore, that said accident happened while said employee was performing a service growing out of, incidental to, and in the course of his employment.

"That the act of the deceased employee in boarding the train after the same had started, but while still moving at a moderate speed, was not in violation of any orders or instructions of the defendant, and did not constitute more than ordinary negligence."

The determinative findings upon which the award was based, and over which this controversy arises, are those set forth in the two last paragraphs above quoted. It becomes necessary to consider seriatim the statements of fact therein contained. The first of these statements, in so far as it declares that it *Page 300 was a natural and reasonable act for the deceased to have alighted from the train under the indicated circumstances, calls for little comment. It is quite natural and quite usual for a passenger thus to alight when he knows that a human being has sustained injury, whether the motive which prompts him be one of curiosity, or humanity, or a commingling of the two. The further declaration to the effect that the act of alighting "was not such a departure from the course of the duties of his employment" as to take the employee out of the provisions of the act, is, of course, but a conclusion of law, which will be considered in the discussion to follow. It is sufficient here to point out that the statement seems to imply or admit that his act in alighting was outside of his duties and a departure therefrom. But, singularly enough, this is negatived by the statement immediately following, to the effect (though here again the finding is not direct, but is made by way of implication) that in alighting he was actually performing a duty to his employer, although but an implied duty, and that therefore the "accident happened while said employee was performing a service growing out of or incidental to and in the course of his employment."

The transcript of evidence will be searched in vain to discover one word arising to the dignity of evidence, to establish the statement that the deceased alighted from the train "to be available in case his services should be useful," or that if he did that it was any part of his express or implied duties as an employee of the defendant so to do. The testimony of the president and general manager of the road was taken at great length. That testimony is positive and uncontradicted that there was no rule, written or unwritten, and no custom, whereby employees riding upon a train other than and outside of the train crew were called upon or expected to enter into an investigation in case of an accident, to secure the names of witnesses, or to perform any like service. He says: "Such duties are entirely confined to the conductor of the train, or special agent, or one of his authorized assistants, or one of our railroad policemen who might be on the train. The conductor has authority to call upon any other employee that may be there for assistance, but it is not considered their duty to volunteer, nor is there any obligation on their part so to do. . . . Furthermore, the conductor or special agent or other official whose duties are naturally such matters would consider *Page 301

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Bluebook (online)
163 P. 1000, 174 Cal. 297, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-p-r-r-co-v-industrial-acc-comm-cal-1917.