Oliver v. Wyandotte Ind. Corporation

360 A.2d 144, 1976 Me. LEXIS 334
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 15, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 360 A.2d 144 (Oliver v. Wyandotte Ind. Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Wyandotte Ind. Corporation, 360 A.2d 144, 1976 Me. LEXIS 334 (Me. 1976).

Opinion

WERNICK, Justice.

This is an appeal by the employer Wyan-dotte Industries Corporation, and its insurance carrier Travelers Insurance Company, from an amended pro forma decree of the Superior Court (Kennebec County) affirming a March 25, 1975 decree of the Industrial Accident Commission awarding compensation for total incapacity to the employee, Glenys M. Oliver, petitioner for an award of compensation.

The Commission had previously denied the petitioner compensation because the injury alleged compensable had resulted from a motor vehicle collision occurring on a public street which petitioner had entered on leaving the premises of her employment. The Commission found none of the exceptions to the so-called “public street” rule, as delineated in Rawson’s Case, 126 Me. 563, 140 A. 365 (1928), applicable and held petitioner’s injury noncompensable on the rationale that Rawson’s Case specified the exclusive circumstances in which injuries resulting from accidents occurring on a public street off the premises of the employer may be held compensable.

On the petitioner’s appeal subjecting that first decision of the Commission to this Court’s scrutiny, we rejected the Commission’s view. In Oliver v. Wyandotte Industries Corporation, Me., 308 A.2d 860 *146 (1973) (hereinafter designated “Oliver I”) we decided that the exceptions mentioned in Rawson’s Case are not the exclusive criteria of the compensability of injuries sustained by an employee in off-premises accidents occurring on a public street. We concluded that

“ . . . the Petitioner’s accident would be compensable if it is found that a condition existed on the employer’s premises which made hazardous the employee’s exit into the public street and was in fact a cause of the employee being injured after she had reached the street.” (p. 863)

Since in Oliver I the Commissioner’s erroneous reliance on the exceptions in Raw-son’s Case as exclusive had led him to shut off petitioner’s undertaking to present evidence which under our decision in Oliver I could entitle petitioner to an award of compensation, we remanded the case to the Commission for further hearing and determination.

On remand, the Commission awarded the petitioner compensation for total disability, and, now, the employer and insurance carrier are the appellants before this Court. They maintain: (1) the Commission erred in holding the petitioner’s injury compen-sable, and (2) even if petitioner be entitled to an award of compensation, the Commission wrongly held petitioner’s incapacity to be total.

I. The Compensability Issue

Evidence adduced at the hearing on remand supports the Commissioner’s findings of fact, as facts found additional to those previously described in Oliver I, that:

(1) “[t]he private road [“Head of the Falls” located on the employer’s premises] was icy and slippery”;
(2) “there were snowbanks about six (6) feet high on each side of the Head of the Falls Road and said snowbanks extended into the intersection of the Falls Road and Front Street [the public street]”;

(3)these snowbanks created a hazard to petitioner’s egress from the premises of the employer on to Front Street because they obstructed petitioner’s vision of traffic approaching along Front Street from petitioner’s left; and (4) the hazard thus created contributed to the automobile collision causing petitioner’s injury.

We conclude that the case now before us is precedentially governed by the decision in Oliver I since the Commissioner’s controlling findings make plain that a hazard created by a condition existing on the employer’s premises was a cause of petitioner’s injury. 1 That the hazard involved was not unique to Wyandotte employees — whether because high snowbanks are a fact of life during Maine winters or because non-employees sometimes use Head of the Falls Road — is without legal consequence. It was the fact of petitioner’s employment which required her to make the egress from the Head of the Falls Road situated on the premises of her employer onto the public street, Front Street. On this predicate the thrust of Oliver I is that a hazard to the employee’s egress from her work situs created by a condition on the premises constituting the work situs is fairly attributable to the employment. Consequently, as is generally the rule in regard to dangers to employees arising from their employment, it is immaterial to the issue of compensability that *147 the dangers happen to be of a kind commonly confronted by non-employees. 2

Notwithstanding, however, that (1) the snowbanks thus created an employment-related hazard to petitioner, and (2) the Commissioner found that this employment-related hazard causally contributed to the accident producing petitioner’s injury, the employer and insurance carrier contend that the injury is not compensable because the hazard created by the snowbanks was not the “controllingly effective” cause of the accident in which petitioner was injured. 3

The contention is unsound.

It has always been the law of this State that an injury arises out of employment when there exists a causal connection between conditions of the employee’s employment and the injury received. Sullivan’s Case, 128 Me. 353, 147 A. 431 (1929); Washburn’s Case, 123 Me. 402, 123 A. 180 (1924); Martin v. City of Biddeford, 138 Me. 26, 20 A.2d 715 (1941). This rule was reiterated in Oliver I and underlay the decision of the Court that Mrs. Oliver’s injury would be compensable if a hazard on the employer’s premises

“was in fact a cause of the employee being injured after she had reached the street.” (p. 863) (emphasis supplied)

The Commissioner found, here, — in findings supported by the evidence — that an employment-related hazard contributed to petitioner’s accident and injury. Since it is not legally requisite that the employment-related hazard be a predominant cau-sational factor, the causational element of compensability was sufficiently established.

There was no error in the Commission’s conclusion that petitioner’s injury was compensable.

II. The Extent of Petitioner’s Incapacity

The employer and insurance carrier attack as erroneous, because unsupported by evidence, the Commission’s conclusion that petitioner was totally disabled from February 26, 1971 and such total disability was continuing as of the date of the Commission’s decree and into the future.

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Bluebook (online)
360 A.2d 144, 1976 Me. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-wyandotte-ind-corporation-me-1976.