Omaha Boarding & Supply Co. v. Industrial Commission

138 N.E. 106, 306 Ill. 384
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1923
DocketNo. 14812
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 138 N.E. 106 (Omaha Boarding & Supply Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Omaha Boarding & Supply Co. v. Industrial Commission, 138 N.E. 106, 306 Ill. 384 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

On August 10, 1920, plaintiff in error, Viola Conover, widow of John D. Conover, deceased, filed her petition before the Industrial Commission for compensation against the Omaha Boarding and Supply Company, defendant in error. The arbitrator selected made a finding that the Industrial Commission had no jurisdiction in the cause. On petition for a review the Industrial Commission set aside the decision of the arbitrator and awarded compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation act at $100 per month for 37 months and $50 for one month, and found that the deceased left plaintiff in error as his widow and a daughter aged six years as his only heir-at-law. Upon a writ of certiorari the record of the commission was reviewed by the circuit court and quashed and the award set aside, and this court allowed a writ of error for a further review.

The Omaha Boarding and Supply Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska for the purpose of “the taking of contracts for the equipping of boarding outfits and furnishing board and other supplies for laborers employed by railroads, railroad contractors and other persons or corporations, and furnishing laborers for the same,” with the right to own real and personal property in connection with said business. It had been admitted to do business in this State and had an office rented at No. 6 Canal street, in Chicago, in which the clerical work was done in the taking of contracts for equipping boarding outfits and furnishing board and other supplies for laborers employed as aforesaid. It also had an office on the first floor of a building at No. 611 West Madison street, rented November 5, 1919, in which were stored under and back of the counters and in the rear of the office, skillets, pots, chinaware, cups, tin plates, platters, soup bowls, mattresses, coal stoves, desks, and other equipment of similar character used in its boarding and lodging camps. This latter place is a room about 18x20 feet, and is referred to in the evidence as the office and storeroom, and in which it conducts its business as an employment agency. It also has a similar storeroom rented in Omaha, Nebraska, of the same character as the one above described, ’which is approximately 20x40 feet. These are the only storerooms that it had at the time of the accident. It established various boarding camps on railroads and other places where laborers congregated for work in this State and in Indiana, for the purpose of boarding and furnishing supplies to such laborers. The railroad companies furnished the temporary buildings for the camps on the railroads, which were generally railroad cars. The camps were shifting or on the move constantly as the work of the laborers shifted, and the railroad companies moved the boarding cars on the railroads, together with all the camp equipment and the employees conducting the boarding houses or places or working therein for defendant in error. Defendant in error had boarding cars and temporary buildings at Gary, Indiana, constructed by the parties for whom the laborers worked that it boarded. Three of the houses so constructed were about 22x50 feet, and these are the only houses that the evidence discloses defendant' in error used for its purposes aforesaid. It had nothing to do with the work for which the laborers were employed by the railroads or by other contractors, except to maintain and operate the boarding houses and camps and move the camps from place to place for the purpose of feeding the laborers. It hired some of the laborers working for the contractors, but did that in its capacity as an employment agency and for the contractors. In conducting its business of boarding and lodging, it, of course, furnished the dishes, bedding, food, cooks, waiters, etc.

John D. Conover was employed by defendant in error as manager of its camps. His duties were to visit the camps and supervise the placing, opening and operation of them and of the removal of the same from place to place. On November 25, 1919, Conover took a cook and the cook’s wife to one of the camps at Barrington, Illinois, about thirty-five miles from Chicago. They were taken in an automobile owned by W. W. Freeland, one of the officers of the company, and the automobile was driven by Harry Everndon, who was an employee of defendant in error but was then on his vacation. After leaving the cook and his wife at the camp Conover loaded two or three packages of burlap sacks and some papers and blanks into the automobile, all of which belonged to defendant in error, and with the driver started for Chicago, where he lived. On their way to Chicago, after dark and while it was snowing and raining, the automobile struck the abutment of a culvert, or something like that, and ran out of the road and struck a tree. There was a crash and a flash of fire and Conover was hurt and the automobile badly damaged. A garage man was called, who took Conover to Chicago in another automobile, and they arrived at his home about twelve o’clock that night. A doctor twas called, who dressed and sewed up his wounds, which consisted of several cuts on the head and arms and bruises and skinned places on his body and legs. His stomach was bruised and injured in the accident, and shortly afterwards a knot formed on the left side of his abdomen. He wore a silk elastic belt for a while and later used a truss. Conover returned to his work on the following Monday, six days after his injury, and remained in the employment of defendant in error in the same capacity in which he had been employed until June 17 following. On July 20, 1920, he went to a hospital and was operated on for hernia. The operation was scheduled as herniotomy. The operation was performed by an incision in the abdomen just to the left of the navel and the hernia was reduced. At the same operation and through the same incision the appendix was also removed. Peritonitis set in after the operation and Conover died July 26, 1920. The physician who performed the operation testified that the primary purpose of the operation was for hernia, and that the hernia could have been caused by a shock to the abdomen. Plaintiff in error testified that her husband did not have a hernia before the accident and that the hernia became apparent very soon after it.

The record shows that there was notice of the accident to defendant in error, as contended by plaintiff in error. The president of defendant in error visited Conover while he was injured and before he returned to work, and testified that he went out to see Conover and that he was present when he was examined by the doctor. These facts and other circumstances show the company had notice of the accident, as required by section 24 of the Compensation act.

The employment of Conover was broken in this case by the accidental injury. He was incapacitated from performing his work, and by reason thereof remained away from his employment, incapacitated, for six days. Under this state of the facts he or his widow had eighteen months in which to file his claim for compensation under section 24 of the Workmen’s Compensation act, as amended in 1919, and the fact that he did not make claim for compensation within six months did not bar his right or his widow’s right to compensation, if not otherwise barred. (Laws of 1919, p. 551.)

It is apparent, under the facts and the decisions of this court, that Conover received an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment.

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Bluebook (online)
138 N.E. 106, 306 Ill. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omaha-boarding-supply-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1923.