Simmons v. Smith

96 A.2d 480, 202 Md. 367, 1953 Md. LEXIS 334
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 15, 1953
Docket[No. 138, October Term, 1952.]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 A.2d 480 (Simmons v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Smith, 96 A.2d 480, 202 Md. 367, 1953 Md. LEXIS 334 (Md. 1953).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal is from a judgment following a directed verdict for the appellees. The question to be decided *369 is whether the appellant was engaged in extra-hazardous, and thus compensable, employment at the time of the injury suffered by her in 1949. The State Industrial Accident Commission decided that the appellees were not employers, and the appellant was not an employee, within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. Cornelia Simmons, the appellant, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City and the case went to trial before a jury. At the conclusion of the whole cas"e, the Court granted the appellees’ prayer to instruct the jury that there was no evidence in the case sufficient to show that the order of the Accident Commission was incorrect.

The appellant argued that the judgment should be reversed because (1), there was evidence to go to the jury that the work in which she was employed was extra-hazardous, and (2), the demurrer prayer should not have been granted, because it did not comply with Part 3, Rule 4 of the General Rules of Practice and Procedure, in that it did not state the grounds of the motion.

We thing the appellant cannot succeed on either point. On the first, the facts show that she was employed by the appellees a day or two a week, primarily as a laundress, most of her time being occupied in ironing. The home in which the appellees lived consisted of twelve rooms. Eight were used as a tourist home and the remaining four as private living quarters. Occasionally, when the appellant was not washing or ironing, she would make beds, wash windows, and sweep or use the vacuum cleaner in all parts of the structure. Most of the washing and ironing which the appellant did was of the personal laundry of the appellees, since the linens from the tourist home were sent to a commercial laundry. On the day of the accident, as occasionally happened in the slack season, the appellant suggested that while she was doing the personal laundry of the appellees, she might as well do four sheets and pillow cases which had been used the night before in the tourist home. The washing was done in the basement of the home in an *370 ordinary electric washing machine. The type of iron: used is not revealed in the evidence, but the ironing was?, done in the kitchen.

The accident occurred when the appellant was ironing.While carrying a pan of boiling starch, she .stumbled over a small platform, spilling the starch on her body and suffering severe burns.

We find nothing in the Workmen’s Compensation Law as it stood in 1949 — and the law at that time was controlling — which would enable the appellant to be classified as an employee, and the appellees as employers, or which would permit a finding that the work in which she was engaged was extra-hazardous. The Workmen’s Compensation Law in 1949, as now, was codified in Article 101 of the Annotated Code. Section 67 of that Article in the 1947 Cumulative Supplement of the Code, contains a list of definitions. Sub-section (1) defines “extra-hazardous employment” as a work or occupation described in Section 20 of this Article. Sub-section (2) defines “employer’’, unless otherwise expressly stated, as á per-' son, partnership, association, corporation, .... employing workmen in extra-hazardous employments.- Sub-section (3) defines “employee” as “a person who is engaged in an extra-hazardous employment in the service of.- an employer, . . and continuing, the section says: “This' Article shall not apply-to . . . domestic servants, . . .”

Section 20 of Article 101 listed extra-hazardous employments. The only one which could even remotely be said to apply here, is item 39, which classifies as an' extra-hazardous employment, “power laundries”. Subsection 46 of Section 20 says: “In addition to the employments set out in the preceeding paragraphs, this! Article is intended to apply to all extra-hazardous employments not specifically enumerated herein, and to all work of an extra-hazardous nature.”

It is plain that the duties of the appellant as a laundress in a home could not be considered equivalent to those of' one working in a power laundry. The decisive question, then, is whether the work the appellant did-was extra- *371 hazardous as a matter of fact. The cases which have been decided by this Court require a conclusion to the contrary.

In the case of Mayor and C. C. of Baltimore v. Smith, 168 Md. 458, 177 A. 903, 904, a nurse, while employed at the Baltimore City Hospitals and in performance of her duties, scratched her hand on the spring of a bed while changing the linen. The scratch became infected and later, one finger had to be amputated. The Court, in discussing the problem, says that such an occupation is not included in the extra-hazardous occupations enumerated in the Statute, and if it is to be within the scope of the law, nursing must come within the meaning of sub-section 46. The Court goes on to say: “The employments listed in the first forty-five paragraphs were not selected with reference to a definite degree of danger involved in the work or occupation of the workman, since they range from subaqueous or caisson construction to musicians at hotels, and so the varied employments included furnish no uniform test or measure of hazard. It is therefore clear that some occupations are within the act by legislative mandate and, not because of their inherent danger. Disregarding those employments which are clearly not hazardous, but which the Legislature has plainly included as a matter of policy, the remaining enumerated employments must be examined to ascertain the criteria by which a work or employment is declared to be extra-hazardous. Since the degree of hazard is not determinative of inclusion, the hazard in the mind of the Legislature must be inherent in the industry listed.” (Emphasis supplied). The Court then classifies the hazardous employments into six general types and says: “It is but reasonable to assume that paragraph 46 did not mean to enlarge the act beyond those employments and work which were of the same general nature as those which in the preceding paragraphs had been declared to be extra-hazardous . . . , and, since the first paragraphs are particular and specific and the final paragraph is general in its language, the latter *372 must be confined to things of the same kind and may not be construed to refer to some larger genus.” The Court continues: “In short, unless otherwise specifically provided, the act applies to employment in an industrial enterprise.” It concludes by saying that a hospital is not an industrial enterprise nor a work of manual or industrial labor, and if nursing is to be covered, it must be by a legislative amendment. The nurse was denied recovery.

In Mayor and C. C. of Baltimore v. Trunk, 172 Md. 35, 190 A. 756, 759, the claimant’s husband was chief orderly in Baltimore City Hospitals. His job was to supervise the orderlies, empty baskets, move beds, lockers, and do heavy work in the ward, but no scrubbing. While engaged in his duties, he lifted a heavy locker, the door flew open, hit his back, and he died some fifteen months later from a lung injury, the result of being hit by the locker door.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A.2d 480, 202 Md. 367, 1953 Md. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-smith-md-1953.