Court Opinion

ID: 3623941
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:05:01.750046+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:16:40.734461
License: Public Domain

This is a workmen's compensation case. Louis Katz, the claimant, was a dairyman's chauffeur. On May 7, 1920, when he was driving his employer's car west on Canal street after delivering some cheese an insane man stabbed him. A lot of people were running after the insane man and he stabbed any one near him. The question is whether claimaint's injuries arose out of his employment.
If the work itself involves exposure to perils of the street, strange, unanticipated and infrequent though they may be, the employee passes along the streets when on his master's occasions under the protection of the statute. This is the rule unequivocally laid down by the House of Lords in England. "When a workman is sent into the street on his master's business, his employment necessarily involves exposure to the risks of the street, and injury from such a cause necessarily arises out of his employment." (FINLAY, L.C., in Dennis v. White  Co.,
1917 A.C. 479.) So we have to concern ourselves only with *Page 422 
the question whether claimant's accident arose out of a street risk.
Cases may arise where one is hurt in the street but where the risk is of a general nature, not peculiar to the street. Lightning strikes fortuitously in the street; bombs dropped by enemy aircraft do not expose to special danger persons in a street as distinguished from those in houses. (Allcock v.Rogers, House of Lords, 1918, 11 B.W.C.C. 149.) The danger must result from the place to make it a street risk, but that is enough if the workman is in the place by reason of his employment, and in the discharge of his duty to his employer. The street becomes a dangerous place when street brawlers, highwaymen, escaping criminals or violent madmen are afoot therein as they sometimes are. The danger of being struck by them by accident is a street risk because it is incident to passing through or being on the street when dangerous characters are abroad.
Particularly on the crowded streets of a great city, not only do vehicles collide, pavements become out of repair and crowds jostle, but mad or biting dogs may run wild, gunmen may discharge their weapons, police officers may shoot at fugitives fleeing from justice, or other things may happen from which accidental injuries result to people on the streets which are peculiar to the use of the streets and do not commonly happen indoors.
The risk of being stabbed by an insane man running amuck seems in a peculiar sense a risk incidental to the streets to which claimant was exposed by his employment. Matter of Heidemann v.Am. Dist. Tel. Co. (230 N.Y. 305) does not hold that where the street risk is one shared equally by all who pass or repass, whether in or out of employment, it should be shown that the employment involves some special exposure; that the night watchman is exposed by his employment to the risk of being shot by accident as he nears a sudden brawl which it is his duty to investigate, while the night clerk whose business brings him on the *Page 423 
street but whose duty is not to seek danger, is not so exposed. We decided the case before us and no other, dwelling naturally upon those features of the situation which emphasized the connection between the risk and the employment. But the fact that the risk is one to which every one on the street is exposed does not itself defeat compensation. Members of the public may face the same risk every day. The question is whether the employment exposed the workman to the risks by sending him on to the street, common though such risks were to all on the street. (Moran'sCase, 234 Mass. 566; Dennis v. White, supra.)
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
HOGAN, CARDOZO and CRANE, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, Ch. J., McLAUGHLIN and ANDREWS, JJ., dissent.
Order affirmed.