The single member and the reviewing board • awarded compensation for total disability, but the Superior Court dismissed the claim for compensation on the ground that the personal injury received by the employee was not one "arising out of . . . his employment.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 26. St. 1937, c. 370. Higgins’s Case,
The employee worked as a stitcher for the Adams Slipper Company, in its factory on the fourth and highest story of a brick building which faced southwest on Hammond Street in Worcester. The building was about sixty feet in width, and was built approximately in the form of a square, with sides nearly or quite three hundred feet long. In the center was a large open space used for parking and delivery. The machine at which the employee worked was near a window in the southeast wall of the building, which adjoined a piece of vacant land occupied only by railroad tracks. There was no finding and no evidence that the building was not well and stoutly built.
The employee contends that because his station was on the exposed side of the building, on the highest story, and close to the roof, the finding of the board was warranted that he was because of his employment exposed in an unusual degree to the danger of personal injury from the hurricane, and consequently that his injury arose out of his employment. It does not appear that the employee was required to remain at work during the hurricane. Many workmen had left the factory, and the remainder, including the employee in question, were preparing to leave. Obviously there was no place of safety. A brick building might well be thought safer than the street.
Where an employee was injured by freezing or sunstroke, dangers more common in this Commonwealth, his right to compensation has been held to depend upon the question whether his employment required exposure, which, because of the nature of his work, the place of his employment, or his inability to stop work, was materially greater or more constant than the exposure to which the ordinary traveller or outdoor worker was subjected. Shute’s Case,
There is another principle upon which the employee, in our opinion, is entitled to compensation. Unquestionably the injury was received in the course of. his employment. The only other requirement is that the injury be one “arising out of” his employment. It need not arise out of the nature of the employment. An injury arises out of the employment if it arises out of the nature, conditions, obligations or incidents of the employment; in other words, out of the employment looked at in any of its aspects. Thom v. Sinclair, [1917] A. C. 127, 142, 143. An employee who, in the course of his employment, is hurt by contact with something directly connected with his employment, receives a personal injury arising out of his employment, even though the force that caused the contact was not related to his employment. Thom v. Sinclair, [1917] A. C. 127, 134-136. Lord Atkin, in Brooker v. Thomas Borthwick & Sons (Australasia), Ltd. [1933] A. C. 669, 677, stated the principle thus: “If a workman is injured by some natural force such as lightning, the heat of the sun, or extreme cold, which in itself has no kind of connection with
That principle has been applied in our own decisions, as well as in those of other courts. Compensation has been awarded to an employee who, because of an attack of epilepsy, fell while going down stairs in the course of his work, Cusick’s Case,
There are decisions denying compensation in similar circumstances, unless special exposure to the danger is shown, but we are unable to follow them. Abell Chevrolet Co. v. Industrial Commission,
Upon the principle that we have stated and illustrated, the employee is entitled to compensation.
Decree dismissing claim reversed.
Decree for employee.
Notes
Cases are distinguishable that hold, where an employee is stricken at his post by a physical ailment, unconnected with his employment, which causes him to fall, and to be hurt by contact with the ground or floor, that his injury does not arise out of his employment. Cinmino’s Case,
