Spohn v. Brown

26 Pa. D. & C. 527
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County
DecidedApril 6, 1936
Docketno. 2
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Pa. D. & C. 527 (Spohn v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spohn v. Brown, 26 Pa. D. & C. 527 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Harvey, J.,

The claimant, George H. Spohn, was allowed compensation by award of the Workmen’s Compensation Board pursuant to the terms of The Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736. The compensation board affirmed the findings [535]*535of fact, with correction not now of concern, and conclusions of law of the referee and dismissed the appeal of the defendant. The matter is before us on appeal from the decision and action of the board.

There was sufficient competent evidence to sustain the findings of fact of the referee, and the question of law raised by the exceptions on this appeal is whether the claimant was at the time of his injury an agricultural worker; that is, was he a person engaged in agriculture within the meaning of the Act of June 3,1915, P. L. 777, a supplement to The Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915, as amended by the Act of July 18, 1935, P. L. 1316?

On November 8, 1933, the date of the injuries to the claimant, the defendant was the owner of a tract of land in this county which he did not then occupy but which he was then having prepared for the business of breeding and raising silver foxes.

The claimant was employed by the defendant as a common laborer for the purpose of clearing the ground for the location of suitable pens for such foxes and for the purpose of assemblying and erecting such pens. In the course of such employment, while directing a truck delivering unassembled pens to the place on the land intended for their erection, the claimant fell under the wheels of the moving truck and sustained the injuries giving rise to the claim.

At the time of the hearing before the referee in 1934 the defendant was occupying the said tract as a farm and was also engaged in the business of breeding and raising such foxes.

The supplementary Act of 1915, as amended, supra, exempts “agricultural workers” from the provisions of The Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915: Matis et al. v. Schaeffer, 270 Pa. 141; that is, it exempts those who, at the time of the injury, are engaged in “agriculture”. In order to determine whether one employed or engaged in the business of breeding and raising silver foxes is within the meaning of that act, we must consider the [536]*536definition of the word “agriculture” in the body of the act and the sense in which the legislature used that word and the words “agricultural workers” in the title to the act.

“Agriculture as defined by Webster is the ‘art or science of cultivating the ground, especially in fields or in large quantities, including the preparation of the soil, planting of seeds, the raising and harvesting of crops and the rearing, feeding and management of livestock’ ”: Bucher v. American Fruit Growers Co., 107 Pa. Superior Ct. 399, 403.

In Webster’s New International Dictionary this definition continues as follows: “tillage; husbandry; farming; in a broader sense, the science and art of the production of plants and animals useful to man, including to a variable extent the preparation of these products for man’s use. . . . In this broad use it includes farming, horticulture, forestry”. . . .

The opinion in the case of Bucher v. American Fruit Growers Co., supra, also states:

“In Funk & Wagnall’s dictionary agriculture is defined as ‘a science that treats of the cultivation of the soil,’ and under this definition it is stated ‘agriculture as a generic term includes at once the science or art and process of supplying human wants by raising products of the soil and-by associated industries.’ ”

As we said in Cox v. Hoopes Brothers and Thomas Company et al., September term, 1935, no. 53, in this court:

“It thus appears that in the dictionary definitions agriculture is given the generic and broad sense which includes not only the more circumscribed and limited sense of cultivating the ground, especially in fields or in large quantities: Springer v. Lewis, 22 Pa. 191; including the preparation of the soil, planting of seeds, the raising and harvesting of crops, such as grain or fruit, that is, crops cut or gathered in a single field, or of a single kind, or in a single season, or part of a season, and the rearing, feeding and management of livestock, but including also the [537]*537production of plants and animals useful to man and the supplying of human wants by raising products of the soil and by associated industries”.

We do not believe that the business of breeding and raising of silver foxes is within the meaning of the word “agriculture” in its broad and generic sense as thus defined, but we are not called upon to decide such a question, because we are of the opinion that the legislature used that word in its limited and popular sense.

In common parlance and, therefore, in the usual and commonly accepted use of the terms “agriculture” and “fox raising” or “fox farming”, the first does not include either of the last, nor does “agricultural workers” include laborers employed on a “fox farm” or “fox ranch”. In popular meaning one is engaged in agriculture when his occupation is tilling the soil and raising crops. Whatever else may be incidental, the criterion is the cultivation of the soil and the harvesting of seasonal products. Such a one usually rears, feeds, and obtains the natural products of “livestock”, but such livestock are domestic animals only, in their very nature an incident to the cultivation of and the raising of crops from the soil of their environment and obtaining their sustenance directly from and fertilizing that soil and its plant products. In the popular sense “livestock”, in connection with tillage and raising crops, does not include any wild or undomestieated animal required to be closely confined and having little relation to the soil of its confinement except to occupy it.

“. . . undefined words used in the statute must be taken in their ‘popular sense/ if such sense is ‘not contradictory to the object and intention of the lawmakers’ ”: Carville v. Bornot & Co., 288 Pa. 104, 112. The act was “passed for the benefit of the great army of business and industrial wage earners”: Carville v. Bornot & Co., supra, 112; the act is remedial, and it is the duty of the courts to construe it liberally, having in mind the benevolent and humanitarian purpose of its enactment: Manley v. Lycoming Motors Corp., etc., 83 Pa. Superior Ct. 173. [538]*538Briefly, the objects and purposes of The Workmen’s Compensation Act were to remedy the result of modern industrial development and conditions requiring the cooperation of many employes and the extensive use of powerful and dangerous mechanical appliances and machinery, leaving injured employes without adequate or certain relief under common-law actions and, generally speaking, imposing the burden of the economic loss on the employes. The remedy was to establish in law a system which would tend to give the employe a more equitable, inexpensive, speedy, and certain relief and to shift the burden from the employe to be absorbed by the proceeds of the industry.

The purpose of the act is “to relieve to some extent the employee who has been injured in the course of his employment from the economic consequences of his injury and make them a part of the cost of operation of the business, to be paid ultimately by the consuming public, and it should be so construed as to carry this purpose into effect” : Hale v. Savage Fire Brick Co., 75 Pa. Superior Ct. 454, 462.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carville v. A. F. Bornot & Co.
135 A. 652 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Sgattone v. Mulholland & Gotwals, Inc.
138 A. 855 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
Bucher v. American Fruit Growers Co.
163 A. 33 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
Warner v. Longstreth
164 A. 806 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
Manley v. Lycoming Motors Corp., Etc.
83 Pa. Super. 173 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)
Springer v. Lewis
22 Pa. 191 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1853)
Blake v. Wilson
112 A. 126 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1920)
Matis v. Schaeffer
113 A. 64 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1921)
Hale v. Savage Fire Brick Co.
75 Pa. Super. 454 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Pa. D. & C. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spohn-v-brown-pactcomplcheste-1936.