193 A. 341 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1937
Argued April 19, 1937. Claimant's petition for compensation was granted by the referee, approved by the board and affirmed by the court of common pleas by a divided vote — Judges DUMBAULD and COTTOM affirming and President Judge HUDSON dissenting. From the judgment entered on the award, this appeal was taken, and the sole question is whether there is competent evidence to sustain the finding of the referee and the board that claimant was in the course of his employment at the time he suffered his injury.
From the uncontradicted testimony of claimant, the following facts were established: Claimant was employed by the Fayette County Relief Board as a janitor at the Gallatin Garden building, his duties being to keep the furnace fired and the building clean, and his hours of employment from 7 P.M. to 7 A.M. When he was first employed, his superior informed him that all he was required to do was to keep the building clean and the furnace fired, and when that work was done, he could do whatever he pleased, and could also go home to lunch. Occasionally he ate lunch at his place of employment and on other occasions went to a restaurant or his home, and his superior knew that he left his place of employment for his lunch. On Sunday evening, February 3, 1935, he began his usual employment at 7 P.M. and at 1 A.M., February 4, he went home — about fifteen minutes' walk — for his lunch, and about 4 A.M., on his return, while walking along the street, about two blocks from his employer's premises, he fell and sustained the injury for which compensation was awarded.
Article III, section 301, of the Workmen's Compensation Act (Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, 738) provides inter alia: "The term `injury by an accident in the course of his employment,' as used in this article . . . . . . shall include all other injuries sustained while *239
the employe is actually engaged in the furtherance of the business or affairs of the employer, whether upon the employer's premises or elsewhere. . . . . ." In construing this section, it has been repeatedly held that where the accident occurs while off the employer's premises, the employee must be "actually engaged" in his employer's business. In Maguire v.James Lees Sons, Co.,
"If the employee is injured on the premises where *240
his duties do not require him to be, the departure from the usual place of employment must not amount to an abandonment of employment or become an act wholly foreign to his usual work, but must be an innocent or inconsequential departure from the place of duty. If the employee leaves the premises, his employer is not bound to pay compensation unless the employee was actually engaged in the furtherance of his master's business": Hunter v. American Steel Wire Co.,
Claimant's duties contemplated that his work was *241
to be performed in the building occupied by his employer. Although his work was such that it did not require his constant application and continuous presence, the general permission, to do whatever he pleased, did not authorize him to leave the premises for his own purposes and still remain in the course of his employment. When he left the premises, selecting his own place to lunch, with the express or implied consent of his employer, his employment ceased and he was then engaged on a personal mission, which had no relation to the business in which his employer was engaged. From the time of his departure until he returned to his place of employment, he was not "within the course of his employment" as contemplated by the compensation act: Freeman v. Salem Reformed Church,
The referee and the board relied upon Cymbor v. Binder Coal Co.et al.,
For the reasons above stated, we cannot agree with the view of the court below and the compensation authorities. The judgment is reversed and the award of the referee, as approved by the Workmen's Compensation Board, is set aside: Anderson v. Baxter etal.,