Indiana State Sanatorium v. McMahon

This is an appeal from a finding and award of the Industrial Board awarding compensation to appellee. *Page 345

Appellee sought compensation for total disability due to injuries alleged to have been received by him while in the employ of appellant. In his application appellee alleged that he was "acting as janitor in Womens' Ward of The Indiana State Sanatorium, was furnished board and lodging on premises and was subject to call at any time during twenty-four hour period. Plaintiff was not actually working at the time of injury but was returning to his room from the dining room after eating the evening meal" and "plaintiff had eaten his supper in the dining room and had started to return to his room in the building and in going down the stairway which was dark because of no light in the stairway, missed a step and fell downstairs striking his head."

A hearing was first had before a single member of the board who found for appellant and denied appellee compensation. Upon review the full board found, by a majority of its members, that appellee, on August 24, 1938, suffered an injury as the result of an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment and that as a result of the injury appellee was totally disabled from the date thereof up to and including April 30, 1939. The board then entered an award in favor of appellee for compensation at the rate of $8.80 a week for 32 and 5/7 weeks, beginning September 1, 1938.

By proper assignment of error appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the award, contending that there is no evidence to support the finding that the injury arose out of and in the course of appellee's employment with appellant. This contention requires a review of the evidence.

It appears that upon the date appellee received the injury for which he seeks compensation he was in the employ of the appellant institution as a ward janitor. *Page 346 He was paid wages upon a monthly basis and was furnished his room and board. By the terms of his employment he was required to work 6 and 1/2 days a week from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., with one hour off for lunch and a half day off each week. This half day usually fell on Wednesday but could be changed to another day upon request. On his half day off appellee ceased work at 12 noon and was not required to resume work until 7:30 the following morning. He was free to remain at the sanatorium and take his meals, if he chose, or he could leave the premises and did, at times, during the course of his employment, go to his home in Terre Haute, Indiana on his half day off. When leaving on such occasions he was never asked by appellant where he was going, what his address would be, or when he would return. His duties as a ward janitor included "keeping the quarters clean, utility rooms and one thing and another, and helping to clean up the patients' rooms." On August 24, 1938, appellee had his half day off but remained on the premises, spending most of the afternoon in his room mending his personal clothing. This was not one of the duties of his employment, nor was it a requirement of the appellant institution. At approximately 4:30 p.m., appellee ascended the stairway to the kitchen for the purpose of eating his evening meal. After finishing his meal he attempted to return to his room by using the stairway and, in so doing, fell downstairs causing the injury resulting in his disability.

In keeping with the rules of this court forbidding the weighing of evidence and requiring a consideration of the evidence most favorable to the award, including any and all reasonable 1. inferences deducible from the facts proved, we have searched the record for proof that the injury was received while *Page 347 appellee was performing a duty in the line of his employment, or as a natural incident of his required work, or as the result of a hazard or risk coupled with his employment. It was incumbent upon appellee to prove by competent evidence that his injury was 2. the result of an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment with appellant. In examining the record we have failed to find any proof of a causal connection between appellee's injury and his employment.

The evidence conclusively shows that appellee was not working for appellant at the time he received his injury, nor was he performing any duty incident to his employment or 3. beneficial to his employer but was pursuing a matter entirely personal at a time when he was not required to be on duty, but during his half day off.

Appellee insists that he was, by the terms of his employment, subject to call at any time during the twenty-four hours, including his half day off, and that consequently the accident was due to a hazard to which he would not have been exposed apart from his employment. This contention is not sustained by the evidence. There is a total failure of proof that appellee, bythe terms of his employment, was subject to call during the period of his half day off. Appellee was the only witness who testified as to the terms of his employment.

"Q. Were you subject to call on these half days off?

"A. Sure.

"Q. If they needed you they would call you back?

"A. Called me back if I was on the premises, yes."

"Q. You were not required to stay at the sanatorium on your half days off?

"A. No, not unless you wanted to. *Page 348

"Q. You could leave? When you took a trip like Terre Haute you could have left any time during the half day couldn't you, three or four o'clock in the evening?

"A. Yes, sure."

"Q. Now on your half days off at any time that you worked at the sanatorium, were you ever called back on your half days off to perform any duty at the sanatorium?

"A. Never was, never was in my time there."

"Q. What, if anything, was ever said to you by anyone that if you were called you were supposed to respond?

"A. Oh there was never nothing said about that but I took it for granted when you were there you were liable to be called any time, I go when you are called and I'd have went any time I was called, if I had been called."

The evidence in its final analysis shows indisputably that appellee's injury did not arise out of and in the course of his employment with appellant. Guisinger v. Standard Oil Co. ofIndiana (1938), 106 Ind. App. 51, 17 N.E.2d 858.

Award reversed.

Bridwell, P.J., Dudine, J., dissent.

NOTE. — Reported in 26 N.E.2d 757.