DocketNumber: 25306
Citation Numbers: 198 N.E. 280, 130 Ohio St. 175
Judges: Zimmerman, Weygandt, Stephenson, Williams, Jones, Day
Filed Date: 11/6/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In conformity with modern sociological concepts, the people of Ohio by constitutional amendment (Section
Obedient to this implied mandate, the General Assembly promptly enacted the legislation known as the Ohio Workmen's Compensation Act. Among its provisions is Section 1465-68, General Code, which states that every employee (within defined classifications) who is injured, and the dependents of such as are killed in the course of employment, shall be compensated out of the State Insurance Fund for loss sustained on account of such injury or death, self-inflicted injuries excepted. *Page 178
Where an employer subject to the Workmen's Compensation Act does not contribute to the State Insurance Fund, but is a self-insurer or a non-complying employer, other provisions of the Act prescribe the manner of determining compensation and enforcing its payment. (Sections 1465-69, 1465-72, 1465-74, General Code.)
This court has often interpreted the phrase "in the course of employment" as used in the Constitution and statutes, and has consistently held that it refers only to an injury which is the result of or arises out of the employment. No injury having its cause outside of and disconnected with the employment is contemplated, even though the employee at the time may be engaged in the work of his employer in the usual way. And it is essential for a claimant to establish that the employment had a causal connection with the injury, either through its activities, its conditions or its environment. Fassig v. State,ex rel. Turner, Atty. Genl.,
A statement which has met with much favor in many courts of different jurisdictions and has been frequently quoted is found in McNicol's Case,
General definitions are all very well. The difficulty arises in applying them to the facts of a particular case. Turning to the instant case, there can be no doubt that Hurst was an employee entitled to the benefits of the Workmen's Compensation Act. Neither can there be doubt that his injury occurred in the course of his employment; but did it result from or arise out of such employment? Can we reasonably trace a causal connection between the injury sustained and the nature of his work? Was it an incident fairly to be anticipated?
In the first place, it must be admitted that the "gun" was an instrumentality which had nothing to do with the employer's business of selling gasoline and other petroleum products. Its location on the employer's premises constituted a risk or peril not contemplated by the contract of service. In fact, the contrary is so when we recall the definite instructions *Page 180 given Hurst not to resist holdup or robbery. Hurst himself was responsible for the gun's presence, not for the protection of the employer's property at the employer's request, but in response to a suggestion of a fellow employee who was thinking primarily of his personal safety. The employer never knew that the gun existed until after the accident, and of course did not acquiesce in its presence. Pursuing this line of reasoning it becomes difficult to perceive a causal relationship between the injury and the employment.
In the case of Vincennes Bridge Co. v. Industrial Commission,
Two cases of interest heretofore before this court, involving injury to employees during "horse-play" on the employer's premises, are Industrial Commission v. Weigandt and IndustrialCommission v. Bankes, supra. In the former an employee admittedly in the course of his employment was struck in the eye and injured by a file which flew from its handle during a friendly scuffle for its possession between two other employees. The injured employee's right to an award of compensation was upheld because "the scuffle for *Page 181 the file between the other employes was a thing not at all unlikely to occur. It was an event of the sort that is of frequent occurrence between workmen. * * * The injury in this case was caused by an occurrence occasioned in the environment, and it was an injury occasioned in the course of the employment' and because of the employment." In the latter, compensation was denied the employee, it being held in the third paragraph of the syllabus: "An injury resulting from sportive play by fellow employees, instigated and engaged in by the injured employee while on duty, is not caused by or connected with the workman's employment within the purview of the Workmen's Compensation Act." In the course of the opinion, the remark is made: "As held in the Weigandt case, supra, playful and sportive acts of employees other than the one injured are naturally and reasonably to be expected from the association of men in common work, and do constitute part of the hazard of the environment. A different situation is presented where a claimant himself instigates and participates in such sport. Then the employee himself, and not the environment, creates the hazard."
In considering all workmen's compensation cases it must be remembered that it is not the purpose of the Workmen's Compensation Act to make the employer an absolute insurer of the employee's safety, but only to afford protection to the employee against risks and hazards incident to the performance of the employer's work; such risks and hazards as are caused or created by reason of the employment.
The trouble we find in the present case is to connect the injury with the work Hurst was employed to do. Causing the gun to be brought onto the employer's premises was Hurst's own unauthorized act, bearing no reasonable relationship to the services he was engaged to render. He thereby became subject to a danger *Page 182 of his own creation, to which the performance of his duties did not expose him; a danger not fairly within the anticipation of his employer; an added peril foreign to the contract of hire. Of course, if Hurst had been shot by robbers at the service station in the course of his employment, quite a different question would be presented.
The Supreme Court of Colorado flatly holds in the third paragraph of the syllabus of Industrial Commission v. Enyeart,
Cases from other jurisdictions holding that where an employee is injured by the accidental discharge of a firearm, under circumstances not connected with the employer's business, compensation should be refused because the injury is not attributable to an accident arising out of the employment, are:Ward v. Industrial Accident Commission of California,
In this case we are unable to trace any causal relationship between Hurst's unfortunate injury and his employment, nor can we find that such injury resulted from or arose out of the employment within the purview of the Workmen's Compensation Act. Therefore, *Page 183 the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and that of the Court of Common Pleas affirmed.
Judgment reversed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., STEPHENSON, WILLIAMS and MATTHIAS, JJ., concur.
JONES and DAY, JJ., not participating.