PERSONS v. Stokes

76 So. 2d 517, 222 Miss. 479, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 668
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1954
Docket39384
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 517 (PERSONS v. Stokes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PERSONS v. Stokes, 76 So. 2d 517, 222 Miss. 479, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 668 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

*482 Holmes, J.

This case involves the question of the right of the appellee to compensation under the workmen’s compensation act for the loss of his eye. The attorney-referee conducted a hearing and denied the claim. On a review by the full commission, the. order of the attorney-referee *483 was reversed and compensation was awarded. The circuit court, on- appeal, rendered a judgment affirming the action of the commission.' The appellants, who are the employer and insurance carrier respectively, prosecute this appeal from the judgment of the circuit court.

The facts are undisputed. On November 19, 1952, the appellee was an employee of the appellant, E. M. Persons, in Kemper County and had been since March, 1947. On the aforesaid date, November 19, 1952, the appellee sustained an accidental injury which resulted in the loss and removal of his left eye. The employer had for many years been in the contracting business, engaged principally in clearing farm land, building ponds, grading and miscellaneous dirt work. His operations were conducted mainly in Kemper and several neighboring-counties. The equipment employed in his operations consisted of three bulldozers, two pick-up trucks, one farm Ford tractor, and one CMC “lowboy.” ' The appellee was employed as bulldozer operator and. also at times during the absence of his employer exercised supervision over the work of ■ other employees, estimated jobs, made bids for jobs,' and otherwise acted for his employer. For this latter' service, he was paid $12.00 per day. When serving as a bulldozer operator, he was paid $1.75 per hour. About two days before the accident, the employer purchased 30 cows and put them in his enclosed pasture, consisting of approximately 330 •acres and located about three and one-half miles east of DeKalb,- Mississippi.

Odell Fulton and ft. B. Robertson were also employed by the employer as bulldozer operators. The- appellee and said two other employees, Odell Fulton and R. B. Robertson, lived about 28 or 30 miles .from the home of their employer. On the day before the accident, the employer and the appellee went to the pasture for the purpose of checking the cows:-and ascertaining if they were all’in the pasture. They were ablé to locate only about two-thirds of the cows purchased. Also on the day *484 prior to the accident, one of the bulldozers which was on a job in Neshoba County began to run hot. The appellee and the operator, in undertaking to locate the trouble, removed the water pump from the bulldozer. The water pump was placed in one of the pick-up trucks and the next morning the appellee, accompanied by the other two operators, Fulton and Robertson, went in the pick-up truck to the employer’s residence, where they spent the morning talking and working on the water pump. They ate lunch with the employer at his residence. When the appellee was ready to go home after lunch, the employer requested him to go by the pasture and again make a check of the cows to ascertain if they were all in the pasture and accounted for, and he furnished the appellee with the bill of sale covering the purchase of the cows in order that the appellee might undertake to locate the cows according to the list thereof shown on the bill of sale. In the performance of this service, the appellee was on his wage scale of $12.00 per day. When the appellee departed on this mission, he was accompanied by Fulton and Robertson, who were not then on pay and were merely going along for the purpose of getting a ride back to their homes.

When the appellee and his companions, Fulton and Robertson, arrived at the pasture, they unlocked the gate and drove inside and down a roadway. They located a few of the cows and later got out of the truck and walked down into the woods. When they reached a point about 100 or 200 yards from the truck, a dog belonging to Robertson treed a squirrel about thirty or forty yards from the roadway. They then stopped hunting the cows and Fulton went back to the truck for a twenty-gauge single barrel shotgun which belonged to him and which he had placed in the truck about the beginning of the squirrel season. The appellee and Robertson remained at or near the tree with the dog. According to appellee’s statement, they were “standing sort of surrounding the tree like.” When Fulton re *485 turned with his gun, Robertson was standing off to one side of the tree and the appellee was at or near the road, a distance of about 30 or 40 yards from the tree. The appellee was at about a 90 degree angle from Fulton. Fulton shot at the squirrel and a pellet or shot struck the limb or some portion of the tree and one of the shots or piece of the tree ricocheted and struck the appellee in his left eye, inflicting an injury which necessitated the removal of his eye.

The employer testified that the hunting of squirrels was not a necessary part of the employment of the appellee or his other employees. He said that he did not object to it if hunting squirrels was not going to interfere with the work and that he knew they were “going to be seeing squirrels and shooting squirrels.” The proof further showed that the employees, while going about on the job, had on one or two occasions shot squirrels, and that the appellee had on one occasion shot approximately four squirrels and had given one or more of them to his employer.

The question here presented is whether or not the claimant’s injury arose out of and in the course of his employment. We have concluded that this question should be answered in the negative. We quote some of the tests by which the courts are guided in the determination of a question of this nature.

“The phrase ‘in the course of the employment,’ as used in compensation acts in reference to the relation of the injury to the employment in respect of the time and place of its occurrence, is usually given the common-law meaning thereof, or of the substantially equivalent phrase ‘scope of the employment,’ as used in the law of master and servant, in the absence of other language requiring that it be given a different meaning. Accordingly, it may be stated as a very general proposition that an injury occurs ‘in the course of’ the employment when it takes place within the period of the employment, at a place where the employee reasonably may *486 be in the performance of his duties, and while he is fulfilling those duties or engaged in doing something incidental thereto, or, as sometimes stated, where he is engaged in the furtherance of the employer’s business.” 58 Am. Jur., p. 720-721.

“An injury is said to arise in the course of the employment when it takes place within the period of the employment, at a place where the employee reasonably may be, and while he is fulfilling his duties or engaged in doing.something incidental thereto.” Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, p. 193.

“A compensable injury must arise not only within the time and .space limits of the employment, but also in the course of an activity related to the employment. An activity is related to the employment if it carries out the employer’s purposes or advances his interests directly or indirectly.” Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, p. 295.

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 517, 222 Miss. 479, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/persons-v-stokes-miss-1954.