Eagles Home Ass'n v. Industrial Accident Commission
Before: Craig
CRAIG, Acting P. J. An award and findings of fact in support thereof are questioned upon the ground that the same are contrary to the substantial creditable evidence, and that evidence upon which they' were based requires a denial of compensation.
The undisputed facts are: The employer is a benevolent association maintaining a large three-story building in the city of Los Angeles containing a meeting hall, lobby, several small rooms and basement; also a fully furnished apartment consisting of living-room, bedroom, kitchen and bathroom which the employee, O. C. Leger, occupied as a home. His duties were those of a janitor—cleaning and re-arranging the furniture after meetings, attending to lights and sometimes locking the doors. Early one morning his lifeless body was found lying on the floor at the foot of a stairway, but no one saw him at the time of his demise. This occurred between the hours of 2 to 2:30 A. M. and 8 :30 A. M., June 7, 1934.
The witness Frankenberger testified that between the hours of 6:30 P. M. and 9 P. M. on the sixth day of June, 1934, he was with deceased, that during that time the latter took six or eight drinks of intoxicating liquor and that when they parted Leger was “feeling pretty good”, but was not drunk. The witness O’Brien testified that deceased and he left the hall at about 1 A. M. of June 7th and went to a “speak-easy” place, where Leger “was drinking” liquor and became “pretty well intoxicated”. The witness took Leger back to his apartment at the hall about 2 to 2:30 A. M. and unlocked the door and let him in; at the time they left the hall Leger appeared to have had some drinks. The witness • found the body of deceased at 8:30 that morning. It was clad in the same way as when they had parted a few hours before. The coroner’s autopsy report, received in evidence, states that acute alcoholism was the primary cause of death and that injury to deceased’s skull was the secondary cause. As against this evidence there is none which would qualify before a trial court. A witness stated that members of a drill team who were at [648]the hall at about 1 o’clock A. M. of the 7th and saw Leger said that he was not then intoxicated.
As to the duties which Leger was employed to perform there is some conflict. The witness White; a brother-in-law of deceased, testified that Leger had informed him that he was required to sleep in the building on account of insurance—to do considerable night work and to watch the place and eject intruders. However, Hull, the officer of the Eagles Lodge who employed Leger, stated that the latter was hired as a janitor only and not as a caretaker; that he was not required to live on the premises or to watch or protect them otherwise than while at work, as any janitor would, and that he was under orders not to do his janitor work at hours that would require him to use lights; also that it was the duty of the steward, O’Brien, to turn the lights out at night and lock the doors. This testimony is largely corroborated by other witnesses, to wit, O’Brien and one Barrett. From the testimony of several witnesses it appears that Leger, when at his work, dressed in striped overalls.
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