This is a workmen’s compensation case. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152. The single member found that “the employee, who, as an adjustor and investigator for an insurance company, was on call at any hour of the day or night, did sustain an injury whеn getting out of his car” as a result of which he was incapacitated, that “this injury arose out of and in the course of his employment,” and that “he is
The decree was right.
The question presented fоr our determination is whether the finding of the Industrial Accident Board that the injury sustained by the employee “arose out of and in the course of his employment” is supported by the record.
A mere general finding in the terms of the statute that the employee’s injury “arose out of and in the course of his employment” “is not a compliance with the intention of the Legislature as expressed in the workmen’s compensation act.” See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, §§ 8, 10. Ordinarily it is “the duty of the Industrial Accident Board to make such specific and definite findings upon the evidence reported” as will “enable this court to determine whether the general finding should stand.” The evidеnce, however, may be of such a character that specific and detailed findings of fact are not required. Mathewson’s Case,
The general finding that the employee’s injury “arose out of and in the course of his employment” is consistent with the specific findings and warranted by the evidence.
There was testimony by the employee to these facts: At the time of his injury the employee, who lived in Worcester, was employed as an adjuster and investigator on a yearly salary by an insurance company having its main office in Bоston. The employee’s territory included Worcester County and parts of Middlesex, Franklin and Norfolk counties. He had an office in Worcester, the rent of which was paid by the company, at which he spent “аn hour to an hour and a half on Tuesday and Thursday mornings and Saturday.” He also used his home for the transaction of business. The company did not pay the rent of his home or of his garage or for the telephone in his hоme. “As part of his duties he is required to own an automobile. He is paid five cents a mile by the company for the use of the automobile.” Records of cases are mailed to his home from Boston. It was a part of his “duty to go out during the day and interview witnesses and talk to claimants. He then comes home and dictates on the dictaphone.” “The dictaphone belonged to the company.” “Besides dictating . . . [the еmployee] writes letters, makes out reports and answers telephone calls that come in during the day when he has been out. ... an adjustor’s work is never done, he is on call twenty-four hours a day.” He “does night work frоm his home in connection with the investigation of a case. He receives calls at his home from the company, claimants and witnesses. As a result of the calls he does night work from his home. He departs from his home at night after the usual working hours for the purpose of investigating.” “Nine tenths of . . . [the employee’s] work is outside.”
On the day the employee was injured “he had been to Fitchburg and Gardner on the company’s business. He left at nine o’clock in the morning. The accident happened at six o’clock at night in the driveway of his home in front of the garage. He was returning from work in Gardner and
G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 26, which provides for compensation to an employee who “receives a personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment” further provides — by a provision added to the General Laws by St. 1930, c. 205, changing the law previously in force, see Schofield’s Case,
Furthermore, it could have been found that the employee’s injury arose “out of . . . his employment,” that is, that there was a causal relation between his employment and the injury. It could have beеn found that the employee’s injury received in alighting from the automobile resulted from the use of such automobile as “an appliance of the employer’s business which the .. . . [employee] was using in the emplоyer’s behalf.” Mannix’s Case,
In view of the grounds upon which the decision rests it is unnecessary to discuss the statute providing for compensation for an injury “arising out of an ordinary risk of the street.” See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 26.
Decree affirmed.
