Ready & Callaghan Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission

137 N.E. 422, 306 Ill. 112
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1922
DocketNo. 14840
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 N.E. 422 (Ready & Callaghan Coal 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
Ready & Callaghan Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission, 137 N.E. 422, 306 Ill. 112 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Edward Hansen was foreman for the Ready & Callaghan Coal Company, which was engaged in the retail coal business. The company was also doing a general business, with practically the same employees, of paving, excavating and general teaming. Hansen had been working for the company as such employee for over a year and a half. On February 28, 1919, he was killed while in such employ in the yards of the company at 4644 South Halsted street, in Chicago. A claim was filed by his widow, and the Industrial Commission and the arbitrator allowed an award of $12 a week for 333⅓ weeks under paragraph (a) of section 7 of the Workmen’s Compensation act as amended. The proof showed that he left two small children surviving him, who were to share the award allowed in favor of the widow. On review the circuit court confirmed the finding of the commission. This writ of error has been sued out to review the judgment of the circuit court.

The testimony shows that on the day Hansen was injured he was acting as foreman of the company’s yard; that shortly before noon on the day in question Louis Chrupka, a teamster who hauled coal for the company, came into the yard with his team and left it standing while he went in the office to turn in some money to the concern; that Hansen, whose duties were to give instructions to such employees as Chrupka, told him there was not much to do and that he better put the team in the barn; that when Chrupka started to do so he was called back by Hansen for a further talk, still leaving his team standing in the yard; that it was a muddy, rainy day and the team was restless; that while Chrupka was in the office the team started to run away and Chrupka and Hansen both started for it; that Hansen reached the team before Chrupka did and caught the bridle of one of the horses, and as he did so the hors,e jumped and swayed and he lost his hold and was thrown to the pavement, both wheels of the wagon passing over him; that he was picked up by Ready and others, a doctor and ambulance were summoned, and he was carried to the hospital but died on the way. Chrupka caught the back of the wagon and held on for a time but could not retain his hold, and the horses ran several blocks before they were stopped.

There is no question about the accident or that Hansen was an employee of the Ready & Callaghan Coal Company in its retail coal business, that a demand for compensation was made in proper time by Hansen’s representatives under the Workmen’s Compensation act and an award in their favor under the statute. The sole question raised by the Ready & Callaghan Coal Company is that Hansen, while employed by the company in the operation of a retail coal yard, was not engaged in an .extra-hazardous business and was not subject to the Workmen’s Compensation act.

It appears from the record that in the business of the Ready & Callaghan Coal Company the men employed by it were sometimes engaged in one line of work and sometimes in another, interchangeably, and that teams were likewise used interchangeably, both in hauling coal and also in paving, excavating and general teaming, though some of such teams were used exclusively in coal hauling. The record shows that the team that killed Hansen was used for both purposes. At the time of the accident the company was using twenty-seven teams. It was Hansen’s duty to look after the teams in a superintending capacity, to see that the wagons were loaded and to look after the cars, having the general duties of a yard man. After a teamster went to the office of the company to get his ticket he then went to Hansen and his wagon was loaded with coal. Hansen, in the line of his employment, was authorized to hire certain laborers in the yard, and helped in the loading and unloading of coal when there was insufficient help. Apparently, outside of his general duties in looking after the teams that were employed in both lines of business, his duties were confined to the coal yard.

It is contended by counsel for defendant in error that plaintiff in error elected to accept the Workmen’s Compensation act in 19x3 in all its departments; that it took out insurance which would cover the claim in question, and that when Hansen’s representatives filed a claim with the commission the matter was turned over by plaintiff in error to Sherman & Ellis, the agents of the insurance company which insured plaintiff in error as to such claims, and thereafter before the Industrial Commission plaintiff in error recognized, as shown by the record, its liability on this particular claim; that as certain of plaintiff in error’s business was automatically brought under the act by its acceptance, and as there was never any revocation of such election, its election at the time of the accident, in 1919, was still in force. Previous to its amendment in 1917, section 3 of the Workmen’s Compensation act was interpreted by this court to the effect -that if the business of the. employer was extra-hazardous but an employee was injured while doing work in a department that was not extra-hazardous the employee was not within the act, (Mattoon Clear Water Co. v. Industrial Com. 291 Ill. 487; Seggebruch v. Industrial Com. 288 id. 163;) but since the amendment of 1917 all depart-merits of an extra-hazardous business are within the act and all employees in every department are automatically brought under the act without election of the employer. (Illinois Publishing Co. v. Industrial Com. 299 Ill. 189; McNaught v. Hines, 300 id. 167.) In this case a new question has arisen since the amended Workmen’s Compensation act went into force in 1917, — that is, where the employer conducts two separate businesses, one of which is hazardous and one not, and an election was made as to the hazardous business before the amendment of 1917, and an employee in the nonhazardous business is injured, is the employer liable ? Counsel for defendant in error argue that whether or not there is liability under such circumstances, there can be no question that on the record in this case plaintiff in error elected to come under the 1913 Workmen’s Compensation act as to its entire business.

It appears from the record that on July 22, 1913, the* Ready & Callaghan Coal Company sent the following letter:

“July 22, 1913.
“Industrial Board, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Springfield, Ill.:
“Gentlemen — We wish to state that we wish to comply and be under the new law of Workmen’s Compensation act, and hereby notify you to that effect. We remain
Yours respectfully,
Ready & Callaghan Coal Co.,
Michael Ready, President.”

The files of the Industrial Commission show, as found in this record, the following: “Election Ready & Callaghan Coal Company, 133 West Washington street, Chicago; filed July 22, 1913; filed March 10, 1916.” There was also in the files of the Industrial Commission, on the form known as “Employer’s written acceptance,” an election filed March 10, 1916, by the Ready & Callaghan Coal Company, for “operation of steam shovel for street, road and basement work,” and a copy of the letter by which the receipt of said election was acknowledged by the Industrial Board.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.E. 422, 306 Ill. 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ready-callaghan-coal-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1922.