DocketNumber: No. 20846. Judgment reversed and award set aside.
Citation Numbers: 178 N.E. 886, 346 Ill. 609
Judges: Stone
Filed Date: 12/17/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Defendant in error, Frank Kolnik, filed an application for compensation against plaintiff in error for injuries alleged to have occurred while in the latter's employ. The cause was referred to the arbitrator, who recommended an award. The Industrial Commission confirmed the award on review and the circuit court of Cook county in turn confirmed the award of the commission. The cause is here on writ of error granted by this court.
The undisputed facts show that Kolnik's injury was received in a fight with a fellow-workman; that Kolnik was, and had been for more than two years prior to January 30, 1930, the date of the injury, employed by plaintiff in error. For three months prior to that date he had been working as a polisher and sprayer, using an instrument known as a "spray gun" for painting automobiles. His previous employment had been that of polisher. He was about thirty-eight years of age and was partially deaf by reason of illness some twenty years prior. About one year prior to the date of this injury Kolnik and one Duncan, from whom he received the injury here involved, had engaged in another fight over a polishing job. Concerning the facts of Kolnik's injury on January 30, 1930, the evidence is in dispute. He testified that John Klee, president of plaintiff in error, had given to him the particular spray gun over which the dispute arose and told him to keep it in order and not to let anyone else use it, and that if he spoiled it *Page 611 he would have to have it repaired. Klee testified that he did not tell Kolnik not to give it to anyone else. It appears from the evidence that on the day of the injury Klee directed Duncan to use the particular gun in spraying cars. At this time the gun was hanging on the wall back of a car which Kolnik was polishing. Duncan, on account of his difficulty with Kolnik, refused to take the gun unless Klee instructed Kolnik to let him have it. Klee testified that he went to Kolnik and stood on his right side and told him to let Duncan have the gun, but that he was not sure that Kolnik heard him because of his deafness in that ear. Kolnik did not state whether he heard Klee say to let Duncan take the gun. He did not deny that Klee came over to him and talked to him. As Duncan took the spray gun from the wall Kolnik approached and told him to let it alone. Duncan did not replace the gun and the two men engaged in an encounter, resulting in Kolnik's injury. Kolnik testified that he put his hand against Duncan's breast but did not strike him hard. Duncan, Klee and others testified that Kolnik sprang upon Duncan and caught him at the throat, striking him on the breast. All the testimony agrees that Duncan hit Kolnik over the head with the gun, resulting in the injury for which compensation is sought.
The only issue involved in the case is whether the injury upon which the award is based arose out of Kolnik's employment. It is admitted that it occurred in the course of the employment. It is the argument of plaintiff in error that where an injury arises out of a conflict or altercation between two employees in which the injured employee was the aggressor he is not entitled to compensation. Counsel on both sides cite the opinions of this court in this class of cases. Our decisions are not entirely in harmony in the deductions permissible therefrom. In Pekin Cooperage Co. v. Industrial Com.
In Swift Co. v. Industrial Com.
In Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. v. IndustrialCom.
In Marion County Coal Co. v. Industrial Com.
In Taylor Coal Co. v. Industrial Com.
The last case coming to this court in which an injury of this character was involved is Franklin Coal Co. v. Industrial Com.
The decisions of this court and others agree that it is essential that the injury complained of arise out of as well as in the course of the employment. In this case the evidence satisfactorily establishes that the claimant, Kolnik, *Page 616 defendant in error, was the aggressor in the fight. It is also clear that the fight arose over a matter of the employment of Kolnik and Duncan at a time when they were employed in plaintiff in error's business, and the question is here directly presented whether the fact that the injured employee was the aggressor in the fight renders an injury received by him one not arising out of the employment, even where such injury is received in a fight over the method of doing the employer's work in which the participants of the fight were then engaged. If such fact does not influence the determination of the question whether the injury arose out of the employment the award in this case should be sustained.
Though expressions concerning such a state of facts appear in the opinions, the question has been discussed by the court only in Swift Co. v. Industrial Com. supra, where it is stated that such fact might have some influence on the question whether the dispute arose out of the employment, but it was not in that case deemed to be necessarily decisive. The question as to who was the aggressor there appears to have been disputed and an award had been made. In Pekin Cooperage Co. v.Industrial Com. supra, it was evident that the injured employee was not the aggressor. This was likewise true in Chicago, RockIsland and Pacific Railway Co. v. Industrial Com. supra, andFranklin Coal Co. v. Industrial Com. supra. In the PekinCooperage Co. case attention is called to the fact, as shown by the record, that the injured employee was not the aggressor. InMarion County Coal Co. v. Industrial Com. supra, it was held that the Pekin Cooperage Co., the Swift Co. and theChicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. cases did not apply to the case there under consideration, for the reasons, first, that the quarrel was about a past event in the employment, and second, that the injured employee was the aggressor. In Taylor Coal Co. v. Industrial Com. supra, the injured employee appears to have been the *Page 617 aggressor but the question of the effect of that fact is not discussed in the opinion. While in the Franklin Coal Co. case the injured employee was clearly not the aggressor, it is stated as a prerequisite to compensation that the injured person shall not be the aggressor. While this may be said to be dictum since the issue was not involved, it, with the MarionCounty Coal Co. case, may likewise be said to present the view of this court on that question. As hereinbefore stated, the issue involved is whether the injury arises out of the employment. It does so arise when it is apparent to the rational mind, upon consideration of all the circumstances, that a causal connection exists between the condition under which the work is required to be performed and the resulting injury. Applying this test, nothing is shown concerning the condition under which Kolnik was required to perform his duties which may be said to have led to the injury in this case but his injury was traceable directly to his own actions as aggressor in the fight. It can scarcely be said that a causal connection exists between an injury and the conditions of the employment under such circumstances, since the conditions under which Kolnik was required to work were neither the proximate nor a contributing cause of the injury, which arose out of an assault in which he was the aggressor and was an injury which he brought upon himself. As was said in Pekin Cooperage Co. v.Industrial Com. supra, it may ordinarily be inferred that an injury received in a disagreement over the employer's work in which the employees are then engaged arises out of the employment, but in no case has it been held that it makes no difference who is the aggressor in the fight. In this case it is clear that Kolnik was the aggressor and received the injury in a fight which he started.
We are able to find but few cases in which this matter has been directly passed upon. In Shaw v. Wigan Coal and Iron Co. 3 B. W. C. Cas. 81, one workman deliberately assaulted another, and the latter in trying to avoid *Page 618
falling over a rope in his effort to escape threw up his hand, in which he carried a hammer, and struck and injured the assailant. Compensation was denied the assailant. InLark v. Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co.
Injuries compensable are those arising out of the conditions under which the employee is required to work and may properly include injuries arising out of a fight in which the injured employee was not the aggressor, when the fight was about the employer's work in which the employees were then engaged, but it is not within the intent of the act that an employee be protected against the consequences of a fight in which he was the aggressor though the fight be over matters of his employer's work in which such employees are then engaged. The risk of injury in such a case can not be said to be incidental to the employment but rather the result of such employee's own rashness.
While it is the purpose of this court to give a liberal construction to the Workmen's Compensation act, to the end that the employee may receive its full benefit, yet we are of the opinion that it would be going beyond the letter and spirit of the act to hold that an injury received by a deliberate aggressor in an assault either arises directly out of the employment or is an incident thereto. We are of the opinion, therefore, that defendant in error is not entitled to compensation and that the circuit court erred in so holding. The judgment of that court is reversed and the award set aside.
Judgment reversed and award set aside. *Page 619
Larke v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance , 90 Conn. 303 ( 1916 )
Franklin Coal & Coke Co. v. Industrial Commission , 322 Ill. 23 ( 1926 )
Franklin v. Industrial Comm'n ( 2004 )
Armour & Co. v. Industrial Commission , 397 Ill. 433 ( 1947 )
Container Corp. of America v. Industrial Commission , 401 Ill. 129 ( 1948 )
Stulginski v. Waterbury Rolling Mills Co. , 124 Conn. 355 ( 1938 )
Bassgar v. ILLINOIS WORKERS'COMP. COM'N , 334 Ill. Dec. 753 ( 2009 )
Fischer v. Industrial Commission , 408 Ill. 115 ( 1951 )
Franklin v. Industrial Commission , 211 Ill. 2d 272 ( 2004 )
Riley v. Industrial Commission , 394 Ill. 126 ( 1946 )
Arquin v. Industrial Commission , 349 Ill. 220 ( 1932 )