As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise provides:
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 31-275
(1949 Rev., S. 7416; 1949, S. 3037d; 1958 Rev., S. 31-139; 1961, P.A. 491, S. 1; 1967, P.A. 842, S. 1; 1969, P.A. 289; 556, S. 1; 696, S. 1; 806, S. 1; 1972, P.A. 281, S. 2; P.A. 77-614, S. 163, 610; P.A. 78-324, S. 3; P.A. 79-113; 79-540, S. 1; P.A. 80-124, S. 1; 80-284, S. 1; 80-414, S. 1; 80-482, S. 201, 348; 80-483, S. 95, 186; P.A. 82-398, S. 1; P.A. 84-320, S. 1, 6; P.A. 85-420, S. 1, 4; P.A. 88-184, S. 1, 3; 88-364, S. 50, 123; P.A. 91-32 , S. 1 , 41 ; 91-339 , S. 1 ; P.A. 92-31 , S. 1 , 7 ; P.A. 93-228 , S. 1 , 35 ; P.A. 95-79 , S. 117 , 189 ; 95-262 , S. 2 , 3 ; P.A. 96-180 , S. 104 , 166 ; P.A. 97-205 , S. 1 ; P.A. 99-102 , S. 41 ; P.A. 01-208 , S. 2 , 3 ; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 146 (c); P.A. 04-189 , S. 1 ; P.A. 05-208 , S. 4 ; 05-230 , S. 1 ; 05-236 , S. 2 ; P.A. 11-51 , S. 134 ; 11-128 , S. 2 ; P.A. 12-126 , S. 1 ; P.A. 13-25 , S. 4 .)
Dependent: Dependency is a question of fact. 89 C. 152 ; 95 C. 165 ; Id., 674. Father without income is dependent on minor though his earnings did not exceed the cost of his support. 90 C. 258 ; 105 C. 423 . Cited. 91 C. 231 ; 106 C. 235 ; 130 C. 658 ; 131 C. 202 ; 132 C. 171 . Adult son able to support his family is not a dependent of his father. 92 C. 458 . Employee's mistress is not a dependent but illegitimate children are. 93 C. 423 . Wife living with husband is presumably supported by him and not dependent of 11-year-old son. 95 C. 166 . Father who adds son's wages to invested capital is not dependent. Id., 676. Sister held dependent who relied on decedent's earnings though his contributions were voluntary and not enforceable. 96 C. 303. Sister held dependent though not living with decedent. 97 C. 113 . Employee: A sheriff is not an employee of the state though it pays him a salary; contract of employment implied. 89 C. 684 . Employee distinguished from independent contractor. 90 C. 447 ; 95 C. 421 ; 96 C. 636 ; 105 C. 545 ; 107 C. 146. Musicians for a dance on defendant's premises engaged from an orchestra leader held defendant's employees. 92 C. 407 . Newspaper reporter is an employee. 94 C. 159 . Formerly policemen and firemen were not employees. Id., 403. One doing personal service to a corporation officer in hope of a tip not an employee of either the corporation or the officer. Id., 490. Consideration of whether or not one illegally employed is within the act. 95 Conn. 166 . Employee distinguished from city officer. 96 C. 560 . Firemen and policemen included in 1921. 102 C. 340 . Tree warden is officer in supervisory duties and employee when performing manual labor. Id., 573. Burden is on claimant to show that he is employee. 105 C. 551 . "Employer" includes one working for another in return for prior assistance from the other. 102 C. 474 . "Outworker" does not include treasurer taking clerical work home to complete. 105 C. 520 . "Personal injury" is a localized abnormal condition of the body directly and contemporaneously caused by accident. 91 C. 162 . Erysipelas caused by frost bite due to employment is compensable. 90 C. 131 . Also sunstroke from heat of the work. 93 C. 153; Id., 315. Under 1919 act, the injury need not be located at a definite time and place. 98 C. 652 . A weakened condition making him susceptible to disease and injury. Id; 102 C. 10 . Weakened resistance is injury only if incapacitating disease results; 1921 act broadly interpreted as to resulting diseases. 103 C. 98 ; Id., 707; 104 C. 718 . These decisions seem to be overthrown by 1927 amendment; "occupational disease" was not compensable in original act. 90 C. 349 ; 91 C. 158 . "Arising out of and in the course of his employment": The definition given in present act overthrows expressions in some of the earlier cases; first defined. 90 C. 120 . Causal connection must exist between the employment and the injury. Id., 119; Id., 309; 92 C. 387 . Sufficient if employment creates condition from which the injury arose. 93 C. 587; 100 C. 392 . This definition developed. 92 C. 276 ; 93 C. 315 ; 104 C. 712 ; 105 C. 517 ; Id., 698. That employee does work for his employer not strictly required does not put him out of the "course of his employment"; injuries held compensable received while returning to work after temporary stoppage. 92 C. 84. Resting on the premises waiting for his turn of work. Id., 277. Being transported to work by employer. Id., 91; 93 C. 85 ; 103 C. 564 ; 107 C. 505 ; 108 C. 630. Driving his own car on employer's business. 98 C. 548 . When injury received on the highway is compensable. 105 C. 518 ; 107 C. 168 . Foreman employed on the highway stepping across the road to speak to a friend. 93 C. 52. Stopping at a company store on the way home. Id., 59. Lightning stroke while park laborer was under a tree for shelter. 94 C. 12 . Employer's pistol fired by a curious office boy. Id., 264. Stones thrown at employer's glass which employee was trying to protect. Id., 381. Following usual path over railroad tracks. 95 C. 412 . Fall from scaffold where he worked though due to vertigo. 97 C. 46 . Crossing tracks to get food for employer's dog. 98 C. 289 . Traveling salesman injured in hotel fire. Id., 758. Injury by an insane fellow workman on the premises. 100 C. 377 . Policeman going along the highway to police station. 102 C. 342 . Hotel manager driving thief away from refrigerator. 103 C. 761 . Insanity and suicide resulting from close application to library work. 107 C. 60 . Compensation refused in the following cases: fighting with a fellow employee. 92 C. 386 . Employee, sent by defendant to a doctor, took short cut across railroad tracks and was killed. 96 C. 343 . Taking own route home from work though the company paid traveling expenses. Id., 355; 105 Conn. 518 . Injury caused by smoking against orders in toilet. 104 C. 334 . Injury from playful push by a visitor. 105 C. 397 . Sleeping by permission in employer's barn. Id., 701. Doing work for oneself on employer's machine during the rest hour. 107 C. 517 . Washing car sometimes used in employer's business. Id., 646. Scarlet fever contracted while in hospital for treatment of compensable injury. 108 C. 148 . Claim to compensation must be based on more than speculation and conjecture. 146 C. 505 . When an activity may be an incident of employment. 147 C. 267. "Aggravation of a preexisting disease" may be a personal injury. 90 C. 544. This term defined. 97 C. 552 . Apportionment of the award is not made in case of death. 103 C. 705 . Mere susceptibility is not a preexisting disease and "injury" means compensable injury. Id., 726. Syphilis "lighted up" by fall was compensable. 104 C. 365 . Tuberculosis aggravated by employee doing any work, but not by the particular employment, not compensable. Id., 711. Aliter, when it is directly caused by the employment. Id., 726; 105 C. 656 . Action denied when excitement aroused in a corporation manager by the result of a prosecution in court "lighted up" angina pectoris. 108 C. 493 . Causal connection between factory conditions and grippe held too uncertain. 106 C. 365 . Employer has burden of proof that preexisting disease contributed to the disability. 103 C. 731; 107 C. 66 . Preexisting disease due to former employment by defendant is no mitigation. 107 C. 67 . Cited. 110 C. 227 ; 112 C. 462 ; 114 C. 30 ; Id., 136; 125 C. 189; 127 C. 395 . Minor illegally employed is covered. 131 Conn. 157 . Employee or independent contractor. 121 C. 127 ; 123 C. 320 ; 124 C. 433 ; 126 C. 379 . Trade or business and causal defined. 118 C. 367 ; 119 C. 224 ; 129 C. 44 . Part or process of trade or business, but injury did not occur in, on or about premises under control of respondent. 125 C. 109 . Statute does not require that time be fixed by stopwatch or the place by a mathematical point. 119 C. 44 . What constitutes occupational disease. 118 C. 29 ; 128 C. 499 . Tuberculosis not an occupational disease. 121 C. 664 . Distinction between employee and independent contractor. 124 Conn. 433 . Status of F.E.R.A. employee. 123 C. 504 . Status of relief worker. 126 C. 265 . Child employed in violation of law entitled to compensation. 111 C. 229 . Meaning of "accidental injury". 128 C. 608; 131 C. 572 ; 132 C. 118 ; Id., 479. Unusual susceptibility of linotypist. 128 Conn. 499 . Employee killed on property not under control of employer. 130 C. 1 ; 131 C. 244 . Previous condition of employee immaterial. 123 C. 192 ; 129 C. 532 . Injury must arise out of employment and be causally traceable to it. 109 C. 378; Id., 473; 115 C. 446 ; 116 C. 297 ; 119 C. 1 ; Id., 170; Id., 248; Id., 694; 122 C. 343 ; 123 C. 327 ; 124 C. 355 ; 129 C. 240 ; Id., 669; 130 C. 11 ; 133 C. 78; Id., 614. When bodily injury arises through weakened resistance, entitled to compensation. 110 C. 248 ; 129 Conn. 532 . Injury from (pneumonia) weakened resistance does not entitle to compensation. 111 C. 188 . Meaning of "through weakened resistance and lowered vitality". 116 C. 186 . Litigation neurosis not compensable. Id., 229. Apportionment for aggravation applied to death cases. 114 C. 389 ; 121 C. 71 . Apportionment for aggravation of disease applies only to occupational disease. 130 C. 401 . Deviation from employment. 132 C. 606 . Domestic away from employer's house. 131 C. 334 ; Id., 341. Situation in which employee sought gasoline rations for the mutual benefit of employer and employee. 132 C. 563 . Transportation provided by employer. 125 C. 238. Construction of "aggravation of preexisting syphilitic disease". 122 C. 353. Where premises were under defendant's control, plaintiff held to be a subagent and employee. 134 C. 462 . Plaintiffs injured by horseplay held not compensable. Id., 672. commissioner's administrative law judge's conclusion that claimant was employee of police department sustained. 136 C. 361 . An employer may by his dealing with an employee annex to the actual performance of the work, as an incident of the employment, the going to or departure from work. 137 C. 134 . Cited. Id., 486. If one employee assaults another to gratify his feeling of anger, the resulting injury does not arise out of the employment. Id., 626. Definitions of independent contractor restated. 138 C. 317 . Plaintiff not on payroll, but paid by quantity, who used his own equipment and occasionally bought supplies for which he was reimbursed, was employee and not independent contractor, since defendant had general control of work. 148 C. 624 . An employee seeking workmen's compensation has burden of proving that he sustained an injury, not merely in the course of his employment, but arising out of, that is, caused by, his employment. 150 C. 328 . Cited. 154 C. 1 , 4. Causal connection between employee's disability and his work must be established for him to be entitled to compensation. Id., 48, 52. Findings of fact by hearing commissioner administrative law judge that claimant was injured while using elevator in premises he was cleaning which he had expressly been forbidden to use would not be disturbed and conclusion claimant was not injured in course of his employment sustained. 155 C. 214 . Benefits under Workmen's Compensation Act are payable only to claimants who have been dependents of employee whose injury or death is basis of award. 156 C. 245 . "Employer" is one customarily using services of two or more employees and employee who was temporarily sole employee is still to be kept covered under act. Id., 276. Volunteer firemen are not included in definition of employee in statute. 159 C. 53 . Cited. 162 C. 148 ; 163 C. 221 ; 165 C. 338 , 340. "Injury", as used in the Workmen's Compensation Act, includes an injury to employee which is causally connected with his employment and is the direct result of repetitive trauma or acts incident to such employment. 168 C. 413 . Cited. 175 C. 392 ; Id., 424; 178 C. 371 ; Id., 664; 179 C. 501 ; Id., 662; 182 C. 24 ; 186 C. 623 ; 187 C. 53 ; 196 C. 91 ; 204 C. 104 ; 207 C. 420 ; 208 C. 589 ; 213 C. 54 ; 214 C. 394 ; Id., 552; 221 C. 29 ; 223 C. 336 ; 226 C. 508 ; 227 C. 333 ; Id., 930; 229 C. 587 ; 231 C. 287 ; 237 C. 490 ; 239 C. 19 ; Id., 676; 242 C. 570 . Injury sustained by discharged employee while retrieving personal belongings compensable as injury sustained in the course of employment. 244 C. 502 . In accord with prior cases, determination of whether injury arose out of and in the course of employment is a question of fact for commissioner administrative law judge; the "right to control" test cannot coexist with the "relative nature of work" test; court affirmed use of "right to control" test. 245 C. 613 . Aggravation of preexisting psychiatric condition due to work-related physical injury may be a sufficiently distinct and identifiable injury constituting an impairment arising from a compensable work-related physical injury. 258 C. 137 . When read in conjunction with Sec. 31-293a , statute plainly states that emotional distress not arising from physical injury is not compensable through workers' compensation. 265 C. 21 . Question of whether injuries resulted from incident that occurred in course of employment is a separate and distinct question from whether injuries arose out of employment; if supported by evidence and not inconsistent with the law, commissioner's administrative law judge's inference that injury did or did not arise out of and in the course of employment is conclusive. 267 C. 583 . In-home health care worker comes within traveling employee exception to "coming and going rule", and injury sustained during travel from her home to home of patient is injury "arising out of and in the course of his employment". 274 C. 219 . Compensation review board improperly concluded that workers' compensation commissioner administrative law judge lacked jurisdiction over claim because the injury occurred on navigable waters of the United States and, therefore, federal government had exclusive jurisdiction over the claim under Art. III, Sec. 2 and Art. I, Sec. 8 of U.S. Constitution and Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, 33 USC section 901 et seq.; state has concurrent jurisdiction with federal government over claims involving injuries incurred on navigable waters when the employer and employee are locally based, the employment contract is performed within the state and partly on land, the injury took place on state's territorial waters and the employer was required under the state act to secure compensation for any land-based injuries incurred by employee. 283 C. 1 . Apportionment or proportional reduction of benefits appropriate when respondent employer is able to prove that disability has resulted from combination of two concurrently developing disease processes, one that is nonoccupational and the other that is occupational in nature, and conditions of claimant's occupation have no influence on development of nonoccupational disease. 284 C. 479 . Cited. 3 CA 16 ; Id., 370; 5 CA 369 ; 18 CA 614 ; 21 CA 610 ; 24 CA 234 ; 25 CA 599 ; 27 Conn.App. 800 ; 28 CA 226 ; 32 CA 595 ; 38 CA 1 ; 41 CA 430 ; 42 CA 803 ; 44 Conn.App. 397 . Based on facts presented, plaintiff's injury was compensable when sustained during a basketball game organized by supervisors during working hours. 91 CA 345 . Injured personal care assistant who worked 25.75 hours per week not employee because did not work 26 hours per work as required by Subdiv. (9) definition of employee. 108 CA 581 . The term "employer" does not include the U.S. Postal Service because the federal government has not expressly consented to the jurisdiction of the Workers' Compensation Act. 111 CA 821 ; judgment affirmed, see 296 C. 426 . Plaintiff's asthma was an occupational disease because his employment was more likely to cause this disease than would other kinds of employment carried on under same conditions. 115 CA 702 . Police officer's injuries while driving his children to day care before his shift were compensable because police officers are "portal-to-portal" employees and he was traveling his usual route to work when collision occurred. 157 CA 822 . Although the definition of "occupational disease" may be derived from workers' compensation law, it does not follow that the term applies only to workers' compensation claims brought against one's own employer; clauses in asbestos liability insurance contracts that exclude coverage for occupational disease do not bar coverage only for occupational disease claims brought by a policyholder's own employees, but also apply to complainants who developed occupational disease while using the policyholder's products in the course of working for another employer. 171 CA 61 . Although the personal infirmity that caused plaintiff to fall backward and hit her head on the ground at her place of employment did not arise out of her employment, the resultant injuries that were caused by her head hitting the ground at her workplace did arise out of her employment. 182 CA 224 . When the life expectancy of the decedent is less than the term covered by the award. 2 CS 30 . Compensation is allowed only when the preexisting disease is aggravated by the injury; it does not include the situation where the injury is made more serious because of the preexisting disease. 6 CS 256 . Plaintiff injured while being transported to place of employment by employer on day before her salary began was within the course of her employment. Id., 288. Heart condition is not necessarily inconsistent with the occurrence of an accident within the concept of statute. 7 CS 5 . One who reported to a municipal station after each snowfall for employment in snow removal work was not an employee under act until he was hired. 12 CS 313 . Cited. 13 CS 417 . Enlargement of plaintiff's heart not a "personal injury". 14 CS 131. Cited. 15 CS 324 . Distinction drawn between "special hazards" test and "arising out of and in the course of his employment". 20 CS 202 . Injury sustained as result of playing basketball at company club held not to have arisen out of and in the course of employment. 24 CS 262 . Cited. 37 CS 836 ; 38 CS 324 ; 39 CS 408 . Former Subsec. (b): "Employment of casual nature" defined. 90 C. 451 ; 92 Conn. 407 ; 105 C. 594 ; 107 C. 363 . Police duty is not, though on theater assignment. 102 Conn. 342 . Washing windows in defendant's factory is not. 107 C. 192 . This exception not to be construed strictly against employee. Id., 364. Former Subsec. (c): Employee of partnership not barred because the son lived in the house of a partner. 91 C. 380 . Subdiv. (1): Compensation for aggravation of plaintiff's post-traumatic stress disorder is not limited by apportionment provisions of Subpara. (D). 259 C. 29 . The term "place of abode", as used in Subpara. (A), does not include the public street. 324 C. 14 . Special policeman appointed pursuant to Sec. 29-18 is not a policeman for purposes of Subpara. (A) if he has limited authority to arrest or to carry weapons, was not issued a state vehicle, was not entitled to travel pay, and lacked training required of police officers. 60 CA 707 . Subpara. (C): Intoxication of the employee, as cause of injury, is not a jurisdictional fact requiring the claimant to prove the lack thereof, but an affirmative defense to be proved by the employer. 136 CA 258 . Although police officers enjoy "portal to portal" coverage under act, officer's slip and fall on patch of ice in his driveway did not occur in the course of employment. 143 CA 313 . Because defendant concedes that plaintiff's preexisting condition was not occupational, defendant is not entitled to apportionment of plaintiff's disability to aggravation of preexisting condition attributable to work injury under Subpara. (D). 164 CA 41 . Subdiv. (5): Cited. 193 C. 59 ; 203 Conn. 34 . Subpara. (D): Work in construction of barn on premises of private residence not in excess of 26 hours a week is excluded from provisions of Workers' Compensation Act. 219 C. 674 . Cited. 228 C. 401 . Subdiv. (9): Cited. 225 C. 165 . Term "employee" encompasses illegal alien, thus claim for work-related injury by illegal alien was within jurisdictional confines of Workers' Compensation Act. 244 C. 781 . In order to be "regularly employed" pursuant to Subpara. (B)(iv), a person must work more than 26 hours per week during majority of the 52 weeks preceding date of his or her injury. 265 C. 816 . Cited. 29 CA 249 . The 52 week period used in 265 Conn. 816 is not a reasonable time period to determine if claimant was regularly employed by respondent, and commissioner administrative law judge properly examined the 11 week period of employment to determine what the usual practice was between respondent and claimant. 180 CA 355 . Subdiv. (10): Joint venture between two nonprofit organizations may be an employer under Workers' Compensation Act. 252 C. 641 . "Public corporation" signifies corporations organized for a public purpose such as municipalities and counties and "within the state" means those that are organized and existing pursuant to the laws of this state, therefore U.S. Postal Service is not an employer for purposes of section and Workers' Compensation Act. 296 Conn. 426 . Subdiv. (16): Subpara. (A): Exposures to two potentially fatal infectious diseases are compensable injuries under the act. 241 C. 692 . Subpara. (B)(ii): Although plaintiff police officer suffered an occupational disease pursuant to Subdiv. (15), his post-traumatic stress disorder is excluded from coverage under this Subdiv. because it did not arise from a physical injury. 250 C. 65 . Legislative intent of Subdiv. states that mental anguish resulting from sexual assault would be compensable under workers' compensation. 252 C. 215 . Pursuant to Subpara. (A), three types of injuries fall within definition of "personal injury" and are covered by the act: Accidental injuries, repetitive trauma injuries and occupational diseases. Id., 596. When aggravation of a preexisting psychiatric condition is direct consequence of a work-related physical injury, aggravation of the psychiatric condition is, itself, a sufficiently distinct and identifiable injury to constitute "mental or emotional impairment" that "arises from" compensable work-related physical injury under Subpara. (B)(ii). 259 Conn. 29 . Subpara. (B): Tort actions for emotional injuries that are not compensable under act are not barred by exclusivity provisions of act. Id., 729. Cited. 45 CA 707 . Decedent's stress-related fatal heart attack was a compensable personal injury and thus recovery of death benefits was not precluded by terms of statutory provision. 96 CA 207 . The social-recreational exception was intended to eliminate coverage under act for injuries that occurred while employee was engaged in voluntary sporting activities or in an act for his or her relaxation or enjoyment on employer's premises, such as power walking, even when there was employer approval or acquiescence. 112 CA 492 . Term "arises from" in Subpara. (B)(ii) requires a causal relationship between a physical injury or occupational disease and a claimed mental impairment in order for the mental impairment to be compensable under act. 123 CA 372 . Subdiv. (19): Cited. 226 C. 569 . Entitlement to permanent partial disability benefits for a presumptive dependent of a deceased employee vests when the deceased employee reaches maximum medical improvement and does not require that the employee make an affirmative request for such benefits. 299 C. 185 .
See Sec. 31-294h re extent of benefits for mental or emotional impairment of police officers.