Tarver v. Pierpoint M. Co.

161 A. 875, 106 Pa. Super. 189, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 223
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 5, 1932
DocketAppeal 10
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 A. 875 (Tarver v. Pierpoint M. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tarver v. Pierpoint M. Co., 161 A. 875, 106 Pa. Super. 189, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 223 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

William H. Tarver, husband of claimant and an employe at the McKeesport garage of Pierpoint Motor Company, was fatally shot by Prank Kerekes, a police officer on duty and in uniform, during a scuffle which occurred in the garage when he followed, and attempted to arrest Tarver for certain violations of our Motor Vehicle Code, committed in his view; both participants were wounded by bullets from the officer’s revolver.

His widow, in behalf of herself and two minor children, claimed compensation from the motor company as her husband’s employer. The company and its insurance carrier denied liability on two grounds: (1) that Tarver by his violations of a penal statute — operating a motor vehicle without license plates and at an unlawful rate of speed — had taken himself out of “the course of his employment,” and (2) that his injuries were caused “by an act of a third person intended to injure [him] because of reasons personal to him, and not directed against him as an employe or because of his employment.”

The referee and board awarded compensation in the amount of $7,503.93, but the court below sustained the defendants’ exceptions, reversed the award and entered judgment in favor of the employer upon the ground that Tarver, by his violations of law, had taken himself out of the course of his employment. The claimant now appeals to this court from that judgment.

Upon reviewing the record, we find ourselves unable to perform properly one of the duties committed to us, because the compensation authorities, the triers of the facts, have not made any findings upon certain issues of fact, which, in our opinion, must be decided one way *192 or the other before we can determine whether the law has been properly applied to the controlling facts of this case.

A reference to some of the facts found by the referee and board, as well as to matters upon which no findings were made, will illustrate our difficulty in dealing with the primary problem here involved; viz., whether the employe had taken himself out of the course of his employment. The scope of that inquiry is broader than the compensation authorities seem to have realized. It is true the injuries were received on the employer’s premises, but we agree with the court below that their infliction was the culmination of an unbroken sequence of events which began with the illegal driving by Tarver of an automobile past the officer at a street intersection located some distance from the garage. It is, therefore, highly important for the courts to know, by means of specific findings of fact, why Tarver was driving one of his employer’s cars in that manner and at that point, i. e., whether he was then “actually engaged in the furtherance of the business or affairs of [his] employer,” or whether he was upon a mission of his own, unconnected with the business of his employer and not within the risks which its insurance carrier assumed. His violation of the statute seems to be conceded all around, but it is essential to know whether it was by the direction or with the knowledge and permission of his employer. This record is silent upon these material inquiries. This may be due, in part at least, to the fact that when this case came on for hearing before the referee counsel for the parties, instead of developing the facts in the usual way by the introduction of testimony, stipulated that the testimony of certain witnesses, taken when the officer was tried and acquitted in the criminal courts upon the charge of being criminally responsible for Tarver’s death, should be con *193 sidered as testimony adduced before the referee. The issue in the criminal case was so different from those upon which the compensation case must be determined that many matters, immaterial in that case but of controlling importance here, have been overlooked. For instance, the officer attempted to arrest Tarver without a warrant and counsel for claimant have argued at length in their brief that, as the violations of the code, with which he was charged, were neither misdemeanors nor felonies but punishable only by summary convictions before a magistrate, the attempted arrest was illegal and Tarver was, therefore, justified in resisting; that may have been material at the criminal trial but we are unable to see its materiality in this ease.

The character of Tarver’s employment and a description of the occurrences in the garage on the evening of August 31, 1929, appear from the following excerpt from the testimony of James F. Gregg, a salesman for the employer: “Q. What were his [Tarver’s] duties there? A. He was just a man, all around man, ear washer, bringing the cars’ in off the street, moving them around, changing batteries, doing odds and ends. Q. How long had he been working for the Pierpoint Motor Company? A. He was working there quite a long while before I came there. I don’t know how long, myself. He was there before I came. Q. Were you present the night he was killed? A. Yes. Q. Now, just tell us when you first saw him and all that happened there? A. I came back in the garage, in the used car department, between seven-thirty and eight o ’clock. As I walked back in the garage, Tarver came down the ramp [one of the entrances into the garage] in an Essex coupe. As he came down, I went up and spoke to him to be sure to get all the used cars off the street. That was Mr. Daerr’s orders, that no used cars should be left on the street that evening; As *194 I came over there, Officer Kerekes came over and spoke to him and said, ‘what do you mean by racing up the street at 50 miles an hour without any license plates?’ And he went over to the Willys-Knight car, and he said, ‘And here’s the car. It’s still warm,’ and he goes over to him and says ‘I am going to put you under arrest.’ Bill [Tarver] said, ‘You can’t put me under arrest for that.’ I said, ‘Don’t do that.’ I thought we could settle it. I said, ‘I’ll get the bookkeeper, he ’ll put up bail, and not take him off the job, ’ and he says, ‘Come on, get out of that car. Come on. I am taking you down.’ Bill was out of "the car then. They walked over and as he walked over, Kerekes grabbed him by the arm. The officer struck him a blow on the head with his mace. Well, they argued there for a few minutes, and then he raised his hand again to hit him another blow with the mace, and Tarver grabbed his arm like that (indicating), and they slip or fall in between the car. As they went down in between the car, the officer was down between the bumper and the headlights, and Tarver was laying on top of him like that. Then he started to shoot, and I hollered, ‘Don’t shoot. ’ I hollered, ‘Don’t shoot,’ and he started to shoot. Q. Who started to shoot? A. The officer.”

Daerr, the local manager for the motor company, testified: “Q. Where did you keep your used cars? A. We had a lot across the street where we kept our old junkers, junkers, no good cars. We kept our good cars in the back of the building where the trouble was. Q. Did you have any good cars out on the lot during that day? A. No, standing on the street. Q. To take the cars from the lot or the street, how would you drive? A. Down Walnut Street to Eleventh and right down the alley to the ramp. Q. Then right down the ramp? A. Yes. Q. Was that part of Tarver’s duties? A. Yes. Q. You weren’t there the night of the killing? A. No, sir.”

*195

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 875, 106 Pa. Super. 189, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarver-v-pierpoint-m-co-pasuperct-1932.