State Compensation Insurance Fund v. Industrial Accident Commission

227 P. 168, 194 Cal. 28, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 210
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1924
DocketS. F. No. 10830.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 227 P. 168 (State Compensation Insurance Fund v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Compensation Insurance Fund v. Industrial Accident Commission, 227 P. 168, 194 Cal. 28, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 210 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

LANGDON, J., pro tem.

The petitioner, State Compensation Insurance Fund, is the insurance carrier for the Fairmont Hotel. It is here seeking annulment of an award made by the respondent Industrial Accident Commission to the other respondent, Florence R. Glennan, a maid employed in and living at the hotel, who was injured by a fall while leaving the premises by the servants’ entrance. The accident was caused by unsafe conditions of the entrance and adjacent runway across the sidewalk, created by employees of the hotel in the discharge of their duties. The maid was not on duty at the time, but was leaving the building for a personal errand on her “day off.” It is the contention of the petitioner that at the time the employee sustained the *30 injury on which the award was based she was not performing any service, either growing out of or incidental to her employment, and was not at the time acting within the scope of her employment.

Maids employed at the Fairmont were not compelled, as is the case in some hotels, to live in the building. When respondent Glennan applied to the hotel management for employment she was offered two forms of contract, either of which she was at liberty to accept. Under the terms of one she could enter the employment, be paid a flat wage of fifty dollars monthly, and lodge where she pleased. Under the other she would be given what is referred to in her testimony as “the protection of the building,” lodgings in the hotel, and be paid forty dollars monthly. For the reason that it was more expensive for the maids to rent a room outside than to make an allowance of ten dollars monthly for one at the hotel, the respondent signed the form of contract which permitted her to live on the premises. Her wages were therein fixed at forty dollars a month, in addition to board and lodging, stipulated before the commission to be of the value of thirty dollars. The maids were not allowed to be in parts of the hotel where they were not employed, and in going to and from the building were required to use an entrance on the Sacramento Street side of the hotel, where the time-clock was located. Other than the requirement about the use of this entrance, maids were free to “come and go and do” as they pleased, provided they did their work and ate their meals within the hours provided.

At the time of the injury in question the entrance referred to was also used as a passageway for trucks. As it opened on to a sloping street, the cement walk between the building and the outer edge of the sidewalk was made rough, forming a sort of runway. On the day of the accident Miss Glennan started to leave the hotel at the required entrance, which she stated was used to take out ashes. She found other employees of the hotel “sweeping out the slush” and “washing out the entrance with soapy water.” As she walked through the passageway her shoes became wet, and in stepping off the runway on the sidewalk, outside the entrance, in an attempt to avoid walking in the water thereon, her feet slipped and she fell, striking against a projection of the building, and received a severe injury to the base of the *31 spine. For this injury compensation was allowed her and the award was affirmed on rehearing before the respondent commission.

Some contention is made by petitioner that the injury did not arise out of the employment, as required by the statute, and this position is based upon the reasoning that as the injury to the applicant was sustained on the sidewalk on a public street, entirely outside the premises of the employer, it resulted from a hazard to which all the public was exposed and not from any peculiar or particular hazard to which the applicant was subjected by reason of her employment. Respondents, in reply to this contention, point out that the contract of employment in this case contemplated the use of the entrance and passageway where the injury occurred, as a necessary incident to the employment. Where the employment itself involves peculiar and abnormal exposure to a common peril, which peculiar exposure is annexed as a risk incidental to the employment, it has been repeatedly held that the risk is incidental to the employment within the meaning of compensation statutes. (Judson Mfg. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., 181 Cal. 300 [184 Pac. 1], and cases therein cited. ) The fact that the accident happens upon a public road or at a railroad crossing, and that the danger is one to which the general public is likewise exposed, is not conclusive against the existence of such causal relationship if the danger be one to which the employee, by reason of and in connection with his employment, is subjected peculiarly or to an abnormal degree. (Cudahy Packing Co. v. Parramore, 263 U. S. 418 [68 L. Ed. 366, 44 Sup. Ct. Rep. 153].)

In the instant case there is a direct causal connection between the injury received by the employee and her employment by the hotel. The injury directly resulted from the condition of the entrance to the premises of the employer which, under the regulations governing her employment, Miss Glennan was compelled to use, which caused her to get her feet wet, combined with her natural effort to avoid the water and slush upon the runway immediately adjacent to said entrance, which water and slush had been placed there by employees of the hotel.

It seems clear, therefore, that the injury arose out of the employment. But a more serious problem is en *32 countered in the next contention of petitioner, which is that the injury did not occur in the course of the employment or while the employee was performing service incidental thereto. Upon this essential element of the case respondents rely upon a recent decision of this court in which it was held that a number of ranch hands who, by reason of the situation of the ranch and the nature of their employment, were compelled to sleep in the bunkhouse provided by the employer for their use, were in the course of their employment and performing a service incidental to the employment in which they engaged, at a time when they had completed their work and Avere in the bunkhouse waiting for supper. (Larson v. Industrial Acc. Com., 193 Cal. 406 [224 Pac. 744].) Petitioner relies Avith equal confidence on another decision of this court (Associated Oil Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., 191 Cal. 557 [217 Pac. 744]). It is contended that this case is determinative against respondents because it is said therein that the test to be applied to situations where an employee is injured while upon the premises of the employer after working hours and because of the fact that he is living upon said premises, is “whether or not the workman is given a choice in the matter and is free as possible to come or go as he pleases.” However, it was pointed out in said case, citing Schneider on Workmen’s Compensation Law, that “The general rule appears to be that when the contract of employment contemplates that the employees shall

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Bluebook (online)
227 P. 168, 194 Cal. 28, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-compensation-insurance-fund-v-industrial-accident-commission-cal-1924.