Sivald v. Ford Motor Co.

247 N.W. 687, 188 Minn. 463, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 1041
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 24, 1933
DocketNo. 29,110.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 687 (Sivald v. Ford Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sivald v. Ford Motor Co., 247 N.W. 687, 188 Minn. 463, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 1041 (Mich. 1933).

Opinions

WILSON, Chief Justice.

Certiorari to review an order of the industrial commission awarding compensation for the death of John Sivald, who was murdered on the night of November 21, 1930, while in the employ of the relator.

Sivald was employed as a night watchman in a ten-story building owned by relator in the industrial district near railway yards in the city of Minneapolis. There were three watchmen, working eight-hour shifts, so one watchman was always on duty. Sivald’s shift was from four p. m. to midnight. The building was empty. It was the duty of the Avatchman to look after and protect the building, keep it clean, sAveep the floors, do such painting, plastering, and repairing as was needed. The building Avas not heated. These men used flash lights and portable extension lights which *464 could be carried from floor to floor and connected with electric light sockets.

Each watchman made the rounds of the building once during his eight-hour shift. He was required to push the time clock every half hour from the floor on which he was working. On the night in question the clock dial disclosed that Sivald pushed the station on the fifth floor regularly until about 6:20 p. m., indicating that he was working on the fifth floor between 4 p. m. and 6:20 p. m. He then made a complete round of all floors and pushed the clock on the tenth floor about 7:15 p. m., this being the last push appearing on the dial.

The doors and apparently the basement and ground floor windows, if not all windows of the building, were kept closed and locked. There was an elevator in the building which the watchmen could use in going from one floor to another. The top of the elevator cab was covered with a metal wire screen.

On the night in question the watchman for the next shift, Mr. Bleed, came to the building a little after 11 o’clock p. m. He found the door locked and waited for Sivald to come and let him in, as was customary. He rang the bell but got no response. Access to the building was difficult. He climbed over a wire fence into an inclosure at the side of the building where there was a small shack, used by the watchmen, in which there was a stove. In the basement wall just back of this shack was a window. Bleed found this window unlatched, opened it, and entered the building. He went up the stairs from floor to floor looking for Sivald. There was a light on the fifth floor. The elevator cab ivas there, with the gate open. Bleed then found Sivald’s body lying on the floor of the elevator cab, with the head crushed. He observed that Sivald had apparently come through the screen on top of the cab. Subsequent investigation on the tenth floor disclosed that blood spots on the floor indicated that something had been dragged to the elevator shaft. The wooden gate to the elevator was out and had been put aside, and the elevator shaft was open. Sivald’s cap and flash light were lying on the floor near by. It seems plain that Sivald *465 was assaulted by some person on the tenth floor of the building and dragged to and thrown down the elevator shaft so as to crash through the screen top of the cab then standing at the fifth floor.

The record is conclusive that the building contained nothing to attract thieves; that nothing was taken from the building or in any way damaged therein; that nothing Avas taken from the person of the employe, as the property in his possession at the time he left his home for work Avas still on his person after his body was discovered.

For about a year prior to the murder Henry Durvald lived with the employe and his family. Durvald Avas an alien and has since been deported to Germany for unlawful entry into this country. In Germany, since the Avar, Durvald had been convicted of 18 major and 18 minor crimes and had actually been in prison in Germany for about four years. Bitterness existed between Dur-vald and Sivald growing out of the attentions paid Sivald’s Avife by Durvald. They had made threats against each other. Sivald’s wife was friendly Avith Durvald. Sivald wanted Durvald out of his home. Mrs. Sivald apparently wished him to remain. The testimony is that she shoAved affection for him. One Avitness says he saw her throAv her arms around him and heard her call him sweetheart. Ten days before the murder Durvald was very angry Avith Sivald. He claimed that Sivald did not use Mrs. Sivald well, and he said Sivald wanted to get him, Durvald, out of the house. Shortly before Sivald’s death Durvald on different occasions spoke ill of him and referred to him as a “son-of-a-bitch” and said, “I Avill get him.”

Perhaps the strongest evidence of a gathering storm was the fact that about tAvo o’clock p. m. on the afternoon of the day he was murdered Sivald talked to an intimate friend, who disclosed on the witness stand the talk in this language:

“It was about two o’clock, I guess, in the afternoon, at the time I delivered milk, I don’t know the exact time, and John [Sivald] was getting ready to go to Avork, when I left I had my car back in the alley and he come and talked to me and wanted to know, he *466 said he wanted to talk to me, he said we had always been very intimate and wanted to ask me something and see what I thought about it. I could see something.was apparently troubling him, he acted as though he was about ready to cry, his feelings were hurt or something, and he asked me if I thought Henry Durvald had anything to do with his wife. I said I did not think so. 9 9 9 I told him I did not think so, and he said he was going to throw him out of the house.”

After the murder petitioner was not frank with the police who were investigating the crime. She advised friends and her own daughter not to talk too much, as they might get into trouble. The wife’s conduct tended to obstruct the full investigation that the facts deserved. Neither she nor Durvald offered the authorities assistance in their investigation. When Durvald was questioned as to his whereabouts on the night of the murder he gave a false alibi. When he was later arrested for deportation, Mrs. Sivald mortgaged her home to get him a bond for his release.

The employe was feloniously murdered. That is conceded. That occurred while he was engaged in the course of his employment. The sole question before us is to determine whether or not the evidence is sufficient to support a finding that his death arose out of his employment. This rests upon circumstantial evidence.

The argument for the affirmative is that Sivald was to watch the building, to protect it from prowlers who might otherwise gain entrance and do damage to it, as well as to watch for fires and keep the building clean; that in an industrial section of a large city near the railway yards prowlers are apt to enter vacant buildings and deface and damage them and by careless use of matches and cigarets may cause fires. It is said that such persons, confronted by a watchman, may commit an assault; and that the character of such prowlers constitutes danger. Thus the claim is asserted that the work of a watchman in such a building in the nighttime exposes him to hazards peculiar to his employment. The difficulty with this line of argument is that it suggests possibilities. But were such possibilities ever realized? We certainly do not know. The *467

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 687, 188 Minn. 463, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 1041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sivald-v-ford-motor-co-minn-1933.