DocketNumber: No. 25614. Reversed and remanded.
Judges: Farthing
Filed Date: 2/14/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On certiorari, the superior court of Cook county reversed and set aside an award of the Industrial Commission in favor of plaintiffs in error, the parents and dependents of Seymour Gold, the deceased employee of the *Page 91 Heyman Distributing Company. We granted a writ of error to review its order.
The proof shows that for about two weeks prior to his death, Seymour Gold, a boy seventeen years old, was employed by the company as a stock room worker. The employer occupied the first and seventh floors of the building. Gold worked on the first and seventh floors and in the basement. It was part of his duty to take merchandise wherever directed by his superiors. There were two elevators in the building, side by side, known as the east and the west ones. The only regular elevator operator usually operated the west one. To raise, lower or stop the elevator from any floor, it was necessary to reach in the shaft and pull the cable. There was also an automatic stop at the top of the shaft. The evidence is that no one but the regular operator was authorized to operate the east elevator, unless given permission by the building engineer. It appears that several people not connected with this employer had received such permission. However, Samuel Reisberg, a stock room foreman for the Heyman Distributing Company, was the only one of its employees who had permission to operate it and the only one of them, who had, in fact, been seen to use it. Five boys worked under him. Reisberg testified that the first or second day Gold worked for him, he told Gold not to operate the elevator.
On the morning of the fatal accident, Reisberg and Gold had hauled some merchandise from the entrance on the first floor and deposited it close to the west elevator. Reisberg told Gold to wait for that elevator and then take the merchandise to the basement. Reisberg left Gold with the merchandise and walked to the basement. At that time, the west elevator was in the upper part of the building. The door to the shaft of the east elevator was closed and that elevator was in the basement. A few minutes later, Gold's body was found in the basement pit of the east shaft. The doors to this shaft on the first floor were *Page 92 open and the elevator was at the automatic stop at the top of the building. There was blood and hair on the shaft wall between the first and second floors, indicating that Gold had been caught between the wall and the elevator, carried up to the second floor and then dropped.
Plaintiffs in error contend, first, that the evidence does not show Gold was attempting to operate the elevator. They argue that he may have been only looking down the shaft to see where it was, and someone else on another floor may have pulled the cable at that instant. The facts may be established by circumstantial as well as direct evidence, and the greater or less probability, leading on the whole to a satisfactory conclusion, is all that can reasonably be required to establish controverted facts.(Consumer's Co. v. Industrial Com.
This brings us to the principal question of whether the accident arose out of and in the course of the employment. Gold was told not to operate the elevator, and we will assume he was violating this instruction when he was killed. The decisive issue is whether he was, at the time of the accident, violating a rule while still in the scope of his employment, or whether the transgression took him outside its sphere. If the former is true, plaintiffs in error are entitled to compensation, although the employee was *Page 93
violating a rule of his employer; if the latter, they cannot recover. (Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co. v. Industrial Com.
Plaintiffs in error have cited four cases in which it was held that a violation by an employee of a rule or instruction of the employer did not take the employee out of the sphere of his employment, and hence the injuries were compensable. (ImperialBrass Manf. Co. v. Industrial Com.
Defendant in error has cited four cases in which it was held the employee was not acting within the sphere of his employment at the time of the injury. (Dietzen Co. v. Industrial Board,
A careful examination of these cases shows that Gold's act when he attempted to use the elevator contrary to instructions was not a thing that took him out of the scope of his employment. Like the letter carrier, the top cager at the mine, the street car motorman, and the urinal cleaner, he was attempting to do the work he was employed to do but merely violated a rule as to the manner of doing it.
The judgment of the superior court is reversed and the cause is remanded, with directions to confirm the award of the commission.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
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