DocketNumber: No. 25821. Judgment reversed.
Citation Numbers: 33 N.E.2d 428, 376 Ill. 207
Judges: Wilson
Filed Date: 2/14/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Madge Johnson, in an application for adjustment of compensation filed with the Industrial Commission, charged that Richard Johnson, her husband, sustained an injury, resulting in his death, while in the employ of the board of election commissioners of the city of Chicago, the city, and the county of Cook. The arbitrator found that Johnson and the city of Chicago had been operating under the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation act, and that the former had sustained accidental injuries arising out of and in the course of his employment, resulting in his death, and entered an award, in favor of his widow and against the city only, for $4000. The Industrial Commission sustained the award of the arbitrator, and the superior court of Cook county confirmed the decision of the commission. Upon the petition of the city of Chicago, we have allowed a writ of error for a further review of the record.
Uncontroverted testimony introduced in behalf of Madge Johnson, the defendant in error, discloses that her husband, Richard Johnson, fifty-four years of age, was employed as a clerk by the board of election commissioners *Page 209 of the city of Chicago from February 17 to April 2, 1938. He performed clerical duties in the general offices until March 21 or 22 and rendered services of the same character in the lodging house department during the following week. Thereafter, he sat in front of a vault in the offices, guarding ballots. Rose M. Sullivan, his daughter, testified that on March 25, upon his return from work, he was limping and had a blister on his right foot, and medication was applied, and that for six days, beginning March 28, her father wore an old shoe, from which the heel had been removed. She further related that on April 2 he experienced chills and pains during the night; that a doctor examined his foot the next morning, but made no comment, and on April 4, although the blister appeared to be nearly healed, Johnson lapsed into a coma and was taken to a hospital, where he died on April 10. A report of a coroner's physician upon an autopsy stated that Johnson's death resulted from lobar pneumonia, complicated by an infected bruise on the right foot.
An instrument dated March 25, designated as an investigator's credential, purporting to authorize Johnson, over a facsimile signature of the chief clerk, to perform investigating work outside of the offices of the commissioners, was introduced in evidence. The testimony of the chief clerk and assistant chief clerk of the board of election commissioners and three assistants was to the effect that no one with authority had issued the credential, which lacked a requisite seal and was incomplete as to its date; that credential forms are accessible to anyone in the offices of the commissioners and have often been used by unauthorized persons, and that the records of the commissioners disclose no assignment of Johnson to outside work.
The only issue requiring consideration is whether Johnson's alleged accidental injury was a compensable injury within the contemplation of the Workmen's Compensation act. The claimant has the burden of showing that the injury *Page 210
not only occurred in the course of the employment, but also arose out of the employment. (Great American Indemnity Co. v.Industrial Com.
The defendant in error, to sustain the judgment in her favor, has recourse to Western Shade Cloth Co. v. Industrial Com.
The defendant, the city of Chicago, raises the question of its legal liability for accidents occurring to employees of the board of election commissioners. In view of the result reached in this opinion it becomes unnecessary to consider this question.
The judgment of the superior court is reversed.
Judgment reversed. *Page 212
Vincennes Bridge Co. v. Industrial Commission , 351 Ill. 444 ( 1933 )
Borgeson v. Industrial Commission , 368 Ill. 188 ( 1938 )
Great American Indemnity Co. v. Industrial Commission , 367 Ill. 241 ( 1937 )
Stanley v. Riggs Equipment Co., Inc. , 133 Ind. App. 86 ( 1961 )
Whaley v. STEUBEN CTY. RURAL EL. MEMB. CORP. , 139 Ind. App. 520 ( 1966 )
Creel v. Handleman Company , 148 Ind. App. 378 ( 1971 )
City of Chicago v. Industrial Commission , 389 Ill. 592 ( 1945 )
Lagomarcino-Grupe Co. of Iowa v. Industrial Commission , 383 Ill. 95 ( 1943 )
Illinois Country Club, Inc. v. Industrial Commission , 387 Ill. 484 ( 1944 )
Marshall v. Tribune-Star Publishing Co., Inc. , 142 Ind. App. 556 ( 1968 )
Dooley v. Richard's Standard Service , 145 Ind. App. 470 ( 1969 )
Tom Joyce 7 Up Company v. Layman , 112 Ind. App. 369 ( 1942 )