190 A. 343 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1936
Argued December 18, 1936. The question presented to us in this workmen's compensation case is whether a traveling salesman was in the course of his employment with the defendant at a time when he suffered accidental injuries which resulted in his death. The referee awarded compensation and this action was affirmed by the board. On appeal to a court of common pleas judgment was entered for the claimant, decedent's widow.
John H. Baumann, Jr., had been employed for a number of years by Howard J. Ehmke Company as a traveling man selling canvas goods, principally picking bags used by producers of apples and citrus fruits, and his territory embraced all of the United States. He was paid by salary and commission, his compensation averaging $1,700 to $1,800 per year, of which $300 was from commissions. Pursuant to the instructions of his employer, he left the office of the company in Philadelphia about August 26, 1934, for the purpose of making an extended trip as he had done several times before and was specially advised to visit one J.H. Hibbs, a farmer at Dillard, Oregon. He covered on this trip territory in West Virginia, Ohio, Illinois, Arkansas, Washington and Oregon, staying at times with farmer prospects. On November 8, 1934, while on the premises of J.H. Hibbs in Oregon and at a place where a tree had been felled and was being cut up, a chip from a wedge flew off and struck Baumann, a part of it entering the knee. An infection developed and Baumann died on January 14, 1935.
Defendant raised no question as to the fact that the accident occurred outside the state of Pennsylvania. The only defense relied upon is based on the contention that the employee was acting outside the course of his employment with defendant when he suffered *111 his injuries, it being alleged that he was then either taking a vacation or was engaged in the service of another employer.
Our workmen's compensation act does not give a right to compensation for all injuries arising out of the employment as is the case in some other states. "On the contrary, it requires, in express words, the injuries, not occurring on the premises of the employer, to be sustained while the employee is `actually' engaged in the furtherance of the business or affairs of his employer": Maguire v. James Lees Sons Co.,
The ultimate determination of the applicability of these definitions, under any given state of facts, therefore, depends upon the interpretation of the act, and is a question of law:Callihan v. Montgomery,
In 1933, Baumann had called on Hibbs at his farm for the purpose of making a sale but was not successful. By direction of the employer he again called on Hibbs on October 20, 1934, and discovered that Hibbs was still not in the market for bags. Baumann had as a traveling companion a woman with whom he had contracted a bigamous marriage and some of that woman's relatives were related to Hibbs' stepmother. He was not successful in selling to Hibbs but on Hibbs' invitation concluded to make his headquarters there for a short time. During this time and prior to the accident on November 8, 1934, Baumann made at least two side trips for the purpose of selling bags. Baumann traveled by automobile for his employer and frequently stopped with farmers whom he thought probable customers. After exhausting the territory in Oregon Baumann had been directed to go south into the citrus fruit belt in California and take such further orders as he could obtain. When he finished soliciting *113 in Oregon it was not yet an advantageous time for the sale of his articles for the reason that picking time for citrus fruit at the place in California to which he was going had not arrived and he accordingly delayed his trip to the south for a short time. Baumann had boarded with Hibbs about three weeks when the accident occurred.
It is necessary to determine just what the relationship was between Baumann and Hibbs. Hibbs testified that he told Baumann he could remain with him without paying any board and until he was ready to go south and that while Baumann was with him he occasionally helped with some odd jobs. When Hibbs was asked as to whether or not Baumann helped pay for his board by his work, Hibbs said that he did not as he was not able to do work which was of much advantage to Hibbs. On the day that the accident occurred, R.L. Hibbs, a brother of J.H. Hibbs, was going to the woods to fell a tree. Baumann went along and gave some assistance in the felling of the tree. This work had been completed and R.L. Hibbs was engaged in cutting up the tree when Baumann, who was not at the time doing anything but standing around, was struck by the chip from the wedge. R.L. Hibbs was asked whether Baumann was working for J.H. Hibbs at the time and he said that he was not.
The fact finding bodies were justified in concluding that Baumann remained where he was with the approval of his employer; that it would be a few days before he would be in a position to solicit citrus fruit growers; and that it was therefore necessary for him to remain somewhere in the west, either at a hotel, private boarding house, or private home, or make a round trip across the continent. The evidence is clear that Baumann was following the instructions of his *114 employer in remaining where he was. The fact finding bodies were also justified in concluding that Baumann was not an employee or servant of Hibbs and that such work as he performed was nothing more than any guest on a farm would do in the natural order of events.
With these facts in mind the legal question to be here decided is whether Baumann, by his stay at the farm of J.H. Hibbs, took himself out of the course of his employment with defendant. The Supreme Court and this court have held that an employee who is injured while traveling for his employer after starting on his trip and before he returns to headquarters is entitled to compensation. In Haddock v. Edgewater Steel Co.,
In Messer v. Mfrs' L. H. Co.,
In Krapf v. Arthur,
From the time Baumann departed from the office *116
in Philadelphia and until he reported there on completion of his trip he was actually engaged in defendant's business unless he did something to break the employment. He had no regular hours of work and necessarily traveled and stayed at hotels, inns or other boarding places. It did not affect his relationship to his employer that Mr. Hibbs chose to board him without charge. Neither did the fact that he performed some slight service for Hibbs change the relationship to the defendant. We have frequently held in the cases of accidents occurring on the premises that slight and temporary departures from work in ministering to an employee's personal comforts or necessities, as by warming himself, seeking shelter, or leaving work to attend to calls of nature, to procure drink, refreshment, or fresh air, or even to rest in the shade, do not break the course of the employment: Dzikowska v. Superior Steel Co.,
Judgment affirmed. *117