Wendt v. Industrial Insurance Commission

141 P. 311, 80 Wash. 111, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1269
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1914
DocketNo. 11392
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 141 P. 311 (Wendt v. Industrial Insurance Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wendt v. Industrial Insurance Commission, 141 P. 311, 80 Wash. 111, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1269 (Wash. 1914).

Opinion

Morris, J.

Respondent appealed to the lower court from a decision of the industrial insurance commission that she was not entitled to compensation upon the accidental death of her husband, the decision being based upon the ground that the deceased was not engaged in hazardous employment, within the meaning of the law, at the time of receiving the injury causing his death. The lower court overruled the finding of the commission, and directed that the claim be allowed, from which decree the commission has appealed.

[113]*113The case was submitted below and here on an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears that, at the time of his death, George Wendt was a carpenter, employed by the Stone-Fisher Company, of Tacoma; that the Stone-Fisher Company is a corporation owning and operating a large department store, engaged in the general buying and selling of merchandise of various kinds, occupying nine floors, employing one hundred and seventy persons, and having three delivery wagons and three delivery automobiles; that, diagonally across the alley from the store, the company maintains a repair shop, operated primarily for the repair of its delivery wagons and automobiles; that, in this repair shop, is a carpenter’s bench, carpenter’s tools, and a power lathe, emery wheel, grindstone, drills, etc., which are operated by electric current by a two-horse power electric motor, the current being furnished by the city of Tacoma over a low tension wire carrying 220 volts. This current is turned on and off by an ordinary strap switch with copper contacts and rubber handles, the switch being placed upon the wall from five to six feet above the floor. Attached to the rubber handles is also a string, which may be taken hold of and used for the purpose of pulling the handle down for the purpose of turning on the current. Employed in this machine shop, is a machinist electrician, who repairs the delivery automobiles used in connection with the store and has charge of operating the power-driven machinery in the shop.

The company employs ordinarily one, but sometimes two or three, carpenters for the purpose of making shelving, standards for display purposes, and necessary repairs, additions, and alterations in the fittings of the store, and the doing of odd carpenter jobs about the store. The deceased had been employed by the company as head carpenter prior to March 20, 1912, the day upon which he met his death, and in such employment had performed the ordinary carpentry work needed by the company in and about the store. On the day of the accident, Wendt attempted to turn on the electric [114]*114current by means of the switch, for the purpose of putting in motion a grindstone on which he was going to sharpen a chisel. In taking hold of the handle of the switch, his fingers came in contact with the copper fittings or contacts, and he was instantly killed by the electric current, caused by the secondary wire of the city of Tacoma, which carried the current into the repair shop, becoming crossed with a high tension wire of a power company, which carried a high voltage and which caused about 2,700 volts to pass through his body. Wendt had nothing to do with the maintenance or repair or operation of the electric or power machinery of the shop, or with the maintenance or the repair of the delivery wagons or automobiles. He left surviving him the plaintiff, his widow, who was residing with him at the time of his death, and who was dependent upon him for support. Upon the decease of George Wendt, his widow made her application to the industrial insurance commission, fully complying with all the requirements of the law relating to necessary proof, and her claim was rejected by the commission upon the grounds previously stated.

The act to be interpreted is chapter 74, Laws 1911, p. 345 (3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 6604-1 et seq.). Section 1 of this act, in announcing the policy of the state in its treatment of working men injured in hazardous undertakings, declares that all phases of the premises' are withdrawn from private controversy, and sure and certain relief is provided for workmen injured in extra hazardous work, and their families and dependents, regardless of questions of fault, and to the exclusion of every other remedy. Section 2 (Id., § 6604-2) in enumerating the hazards intended to be embraced within the term “extra hazardous” as used in the act, names “factories, mills and workshops where machinery is used,” and ends with this general description of included occupations: “If there be or arise any extra hazardous occupation or work other than those hereinabove enumerated, it shall come under, this act.” Section 3 (Id., § 6604-3) defines workshop as follows: [115]*115“Workshop means any plant, yard, premises, room or place wherein power-driven machinery is employed and manual labor is exercised by way of trade for gain or otherwise in or incidental to the process of making, altering, repairing, printing or ornamenting, finishing or adapting for sale or otherwise any article or part of article, machine or thing, over which premises, room or place the employer of the person working therein has the right of access or control.” In the same section, workman is defined as every person in this state who, after September 30, 1911, is engaged in the employment of an employer carrying on or conducting any of the industries scheduled in the act. Section 4 (Id., § 6604-4) in referring to the particular classes of industry covered by the act, includes in class 5 of the construction work, “carpenter work not otherwise specified;” in class 29, under the heading “Factories (using power-driven machinery)” “working in wood not otherwise specified;” in class 34, under the same heading, “machine shops not otherwise specified.” The same section provides that, if an employer besides employing workmen in extra hazardous employment shall also employ workmen in employments not extra hazardous, the provisions of the act shall apply only to the extra hazardous departments and employments and the workmen employed therein.

It being shown that the deceased, at the time of his injury, was employed in a “workshop where machinery is used;” that the workshop was a place “wherein power-driven machinery is employed and manual labor is exercised . . . over which place the employer of the person working therein has the right of access or control,” and that he was injured “upon the premises,” it seems to us there is no escape from the conclusion that his injury is within the purview of the act.

The commission makes, as its strongest contention, the claim that it is necessary to show that the employer was engaged in some extra hazardous work or employment within the meaning of the act, either in respect to his whole business or in some department thereof, in order that an injured em[116]*116ployee shall become entitled to the protection of the act, and that it is not enough to show that the injured employee himself was engaged in some extra hazardous work without regard to the nature of the employer’s business, assuming, for the purpose of this contention, that the Stone-Fisher Company was not engaged in an extra hazardous business-.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 P. 311, 80 Wash. 111, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wendt-v-industrial-insurance-commission-wash-1914.