Standard Lumber Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission

212 P. 720, 60 Cal. App. 331, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 3
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 2533.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 212 P. 720 (Standard Lumber Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Lumber Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission, 212 P. 720, 60 Cal. App. 331, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 3 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J., pro tem.

The proceeding is to review an award made hy the Industrial Accident Commission to *332 respondent, Thomas Truman, on account of injuries alleged to have been suffered by him while acting as the employee of the petitioner, Standard Lumber Company. Our consideration is limited to the determination of the question as to whether there was evidence to support the jurisdiction of the commission to make the award—whether at the time Truman was injured he was an employee, working in the course of his employment. The word “respondent” when used herein will refer particularly to the respondent Truman.

The respondent was injured during the running away of a push-car belonging to the petitioner. The push-car had been placed on a railroad track at a place where petitioner was having work done upon its railroad. The car ran away on a trip over the portion of the railroad track between the place of work and a central camp or headquarters, maintained by petitioner. No one testified directly as to exactly how the respondent suffered injury. The respondent could not recall what occurred immediately before he was hurt, and he was unconscious for forty hours after the accident.

Petitioner’s points are as follows: First, that the injured employee, Truman, was not employed to operate and make use of the push-car and was guilty of willful misconduct in so doing; secondly, that if he was originally employed to operate the push-ear, he was, at the time of his injury, operating the same in a manner that miade his acts wholly without the course of his employment. The latter contention is that the conduct of Truman was not merely negligence in the operation of the push-car, within the scope of his employment, but was of such an exceptional and unusual nature as that it was really not related to the employment at all. Petitioner would concede that if Truman had been employed to use the push-car in furtherance of the employer’s business and had used the push-ear in the usual way and injury had resulted through some act of neglect on his part, the employer would be liable to compensate him under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Stats. 1917, p. 831). (Great Western Power Co. v. Pillsbury, 170 Cal. 180 [149 Pac. 35].)

While the testimony taken before the commission was brief and not particularly clear, it did cover the essential matters in a case of this kind.

*333 It. appeared that the petitioner, Standard Lumber Company, was engaged in the lumbering business in the county of Tuolumne. It operated the railroad mentioned in connection with that business. Respondent, Truman, and about forty other men were employed by petitioner in changing the rails of the railroad to rails of heavier weight. At one point on this railroad petitioner maintained a camp which the men left in the morning and to which they returned in the evening. They traveled on foot. The places of work were a considerable distance from the camp, and on leaving camp in the morning the men took their lunches with them. It was down hill from the places of work to the camp. It seems that, at least in some sections, there was a very considerable grade to the railroad. No map of the line of railroad showing grades or curves was introduced by petitioner or respondent. The employees worked in at least two crews. Bums was foreman of all the work and superintendent of all the employees. The respondent, Truman, was a sub-foreman, andi in charge of the bending crew, the crew that bent the rails being laid. He was injured in the evening after quitting time. During the day he and his crew had been engaged in their work at a point somewhat more distant from camp than where the main body of workmen under the immediate control of Burns were working.

At or in the region of the camp, supplies would be obtained for use in the work which the men were engaged upon. There were two push-cars used along the line of the railroad where the work was going forward. The injured employee, Truman, stated in parts of his testimony facts from which it could be argued that one push-car was left in the control of his crew and that occasionally he and his crew used a push-car on returning to the camp in the evening for the purpose of bringing out, on the following morning, the lunches of the men or supplies needed in the doing of the work. His explanation as to the practice that prevailed as to such use of the push-car by the members of his own crew was very much qualified or practically nullified by other portions of his own testimony and by the testimony of other witnesses. Probably the only fair inferences to be deduced from the entire testimony was that the push-ear in question was taken in from the work in the evening only in the event the foreman, Burns, directed this to be done; that *334 the ear taken in would usually be in charge of a man by the name of Pete Shotelle; that the foreman would have the man last named and a special crew of three others, whose names are not given in the testimony, take in the car when the work was over at the end of the day in the event supplies were to be sent out from the camp the next morning; that this push-car was not used necessarily to bring out lunches for the men. As before stated, Truman’s recollection of the circumstances of his injury was, according to the testimony, wholly destroyed. He repeatedly stated that he could not remember what transpired during the trip or during the period of about one-half hour prior to the time of the trip, on which he was injured. But the award does not depend on his testimony.

The petitioner contends that Truman had no business upon the push-ear at the time of his injury, that he was not employed to operate the push-ear, and that in fact before the push-car started on its journey Truman was told that the ear was not tó go in. This is petitioner’s first point. Truman admitted, in one part of his testimony, that the particular car which was going into camp on the evening when he was injured probably started from the place where the men were working who were under the immediate supervision of Bums; that the crew under Truman had been working at a point farther along the railroad. The facts last mentioned were testified to moreover by other witnesses. So the issue was finally narrowed down to the question of Truman’s authority to be upon or to use the push-car which was with the crew at work directly under Bums.

It appeared that Truman left his place of work and arrived at the point along the line of railroad where Burns was and where the push-car in question was. The men, Burns and Truman, were in speaking distance of each other. Certain witnesses testified specifically that they heard Burns say, “Men, take the car in.” Burns and another witness contradicted this. Bums declared that he told Truman not to take the car in. Bums was superintendent, a vice-principal. He admits that it was Traman to whom he talked. The commission could believe him as to that. It could believe him in part and the other witnesses in part in arriving at the facts bearing on the issue of employment. Such is the privilege of a fact-finding tribunal. (Starck v. Pacific *335 Electric Ry. Co., 172 Cal. 277, 281 [L. R. A. 1916E, 58, 156 Pac. 51].)

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Bluebook (online)
212 P. 720, 60 Cal. App. 331, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-lumber-co-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1922.