The ruling announced in the first headnote does not require elaboration.
The Court of Appeals, after stating certain facts, ruled that “the inference is authorized that the custom of hauling the employees to and from the mill on the truck of the employer became a part of the contract of employment by implication,” and consequently “where one of the employees, when returning from the mill on the truck, was injured by falling from the truck, his injury arose out of and in the course of the employment. Cooper v. Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co., 179 Ga. 256 (
The proceeding is of the same character as that involved in Ocean Accident and Guarantee Cor. v. Farr, 180 Ga. 266, 270 (
In the recent case of Wood v. Chambers Packing Co.,
A similar ruling was made in Billiter v. Hickman,
"The custom of any business or trade shall be binding only when it is of such universal practice as to justify the conclusion that it became, by implication, a part of the contract.” Code, § 20-704 (3). In Citizens & Southern Bank v. Union Warehouse &c. Co., 157 Ga. 434 (
There can be no question, under the pleadings and the evidence, that Curry’s employment or place of work was at the plant of the company in Macon; that his employment was by the day; that he lived in the city less than three miles from the plant; that he could have walked to and from his place of work; that at the time of his injury his work for the day had been completed; that he had left the premises of his employer and was on his way to his home; that his time was his own, unrestricted and unaffected by his employment to go whence and how he pleased; that he was doing nothing in the furtherance of the company’s business. In these circumstances a finding was demanded that the injury did not arise out of and in the course of his employment. On this phase the case differs on its facts and is not controlled by the decision in Cooper v. Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co., 179 Ga. 256 (supra), where the evidence was held to authorize a finding that the employment began at the mill near Cooper’s home, the work to be performed by him being twenty miles in the country, involving travel by him twenty miles from the mill in the morning and return in the evening from the place of'work to the mill. The injury occurred in the morning while he was on his way from the mill to the place of work in furtherance of the business of his employer. That was not a case where an employee had finished his work for the day and left the place of work to go to his home. The case is also different on its facts from United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Waymick, 42 Ga. App. 177 (
Judgment reversed.
