Lightning killed an employee as he was carrying a shovel with a metal scoop over his shoulder while in the course of his employment. Expert testimony indicated that the risk from lightning was increased from a radius of twelve feet for a man six feet tall to a radius of fourteen feet for a man of the same height carrying a shovel. The Michigan Workmen\u27s Compensation Commission granted an award. On appeal, held, reversed. Assuming that the employee was in greater danger by carrying the shovel, there also must be proof that this increased degree of risk caused the injury. Inasmuch as there was no evidence that lightning struck between a twelve to fourteen foot radius from the employee, the necessary causal relation between the increased zo...
In Eliker v. D.H. Merritt & Sons, the Nebraska Supreme Court held that workmen\u27s compensation sho...
The commission improperly awarded the injured employee compensation because her injury occurred whil...
In 1955, claimant suffered a sacroiliac strain while working within employment covered by the Washin...
An employee who suffered from high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries was employed by defe...
Injuries Arising Out of an Employment - An employee\u27s duties take him into the streets where he...
Plaintiff was employed as defendant\u27s bookkeeper. With the consent of the employer, she had done ...
Decedent, a member of the Public Service Commission, was fatally injured in an accident while travel...
The Ohio courts, in their interpretation of the Workmen\u27s Compensation Law, have attempted to est...
In Littlefield v. Pillsbury Co., the Ohio Supreme Court specifically adopted the special hazard or ...
Deceased was employed by defendant as an engineer and, while waiting to relieve the engineer then on...
On the first day of his employment as a messenger boy, in the course of being instructed in his duti...
Plaintiff, an employee in defendant\u27s mill, helped to organize a baseball team among defendant\u2...
Workmen\u27s compensation is an evolved form of disability. It started in the 1920s and is still cha...
Decedent was employed by an automobile dealer as assistant manager of the service department. The de...
While performing duties for her employer, Lillian A. Schick was killed by her former husband. The em...
In Eliker v. D.H. Merritt & Sons, the Nebraska Supreme Court held that workmen\u27s compensation sho...
The commission improperly awarded the injured employee compensation because her injury occurred whil...
In 1955, claimant suffered a sacroiliac strain while working within employment covered by the Washin...
An employee who suffered from high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries was employed by defe...
Injuries Arising Out of an Employment - An employee\u27s duties take him into the streets where he...
Plaintiff was employed as defendant\u27s bookkeeper. With the consent of the employer, she had done ...
Decedent, a member of the Public Service Commission, was fatally injured in an accident while travel...
The Ohio courts, in their interpretation of the Workmen\u27s Compensation Law, have attempted to est...
In Littlefield v. Pillsbury Co., the Ohio Supreme Court specifically adopted the special hazard or ...
Deceased was employed by defendant as an engineer and, while waiting to relieve the engineer then on...
On the first day of his employment as a messenger boy, in the course of being instructed in his duti...
Plaintiff, an employee in defendant\u27s mill, helped to organize a baseball team among defendant\u2...
Workmen\u27s compensation is an evolved form of disability. It started in the 1920s and is still cha...
Decedent was employed by an automobile dealer as assistant manager of the service department. The de...
While performing duties for her employer, Lillian A. Schick was killed by her former husband. The em...
In Eliker v. D.H. Merritt & Sons, the Nebraska Supreme Court held that workmen\u27s compensation sho...
The commission improperly awarded the injured employee compensation because her injury occurred whil...
In 1955, claimant suffered a sacroiliac strain while working within employment covered by the Washin...