The claimant, Bessie Crowe, a teacher in the DeSoto Consolidated School, sustained a hip fracture on December 19, 1952, as a result of a fall upon an icy roadway adjoining the school district property, while she was attempting to walk about two blocks from the school to observe the condition of Highway 169. She made claim under the Iowa Workmen’s Compensation law alleging the injury was one that arose out of and in the course of her employment. The defendants denied the allegation and maintained she had abandoned her employment, was on a journey of her own, and that she was outside the course of her employment when the injury occurred. The matter was presented to the deputy commissioner and determined in claimant’s favor. The commissioner’s affirmance of that decision was upheld by the district court, and it is now before us for review. The sole question in this appeal is whether, under the facts presented, the injury was one that arose out of and in the course of claimant’s employment.
Briefly, the testimony discloses that plaintiff is a teacher, sixty-two years of age, who has -been employed by the defendant DeSoto- Consolidated School District for over thirty years. Her home was in Boone, Iowa, but she maintained a room in DeSoto, where she stayed during the school week. On Friday, December 19, 1952, she drove her ear some five or six blocks to school as usual and entered into the performance of her duties as teacher. During that morning a sleet storm developed and it was decided by the authorities that school should be dismissed at 1 p.m. and the Christmas program scheduled for that evening canceled. The busses were called to transport the rural children to their homes and they departed between 1:05 and 1:10 p.m. The usual hour of departure was 4 p.m., but it was feared that by that time the roads would be too bad to permit safe travel. Although the teachers were permitted to- leave also, several teachers and some town children remained about the premises after the busses left. The plaintiff and Mrs. Johnson, another teacher, were among these, and shortly after the busses departed they decided to- go
out and investígate the condition of the main highway over which the busses traveled. This they said was for two reasons: (1) to discover whether or not the children on the school busses would be able to travel safely to their homes, or would need to be returned to the school; and (2) to- decide whether or not it would be safe for them to start for their homes in their automobiles. Mrs. Johnson said: “We were concerned with the children getting’ home on the icy roads. * * * We were going to cheek on-the roads * * * to see that the students had started * * *” and “to make sure that the roads were safe for us to travel.” Miss
I. Under these conditions, was the injury one that arose out of and in the course of the plaintiff’s employment? It is well settled that the words “arising out of” and the words “in the course of” are used conjunctively] and SO' both conditions must exist to bring the case within the statute. Section 85.1, Code of 1954; Walker v. Speeder Mach. Corp.,
As so often occurs in matters of this kind, we have a general mixture of questions of fact and law. It is somewhat difficult to distinguish them so as to state which findings of the commissioner are binding upon the court and which are for the court’s determination as questions of law. The rule is clear but its application difficult because as here several inquiries involve both questions of law and fact. Here we must pass anew on the law question and determine whether there is substantial support for the commissioner’s finding of fact. Pribyl v. Standard Electric Co.,
It is true the claimant in such matters must establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the venture was for the benefit or in the interest of her employer, and did not amount to an abandonment of her employment, to' enable her to recover under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Ordinarily this is a fact question and under our Iowa statutes is for the commissioner to say whether claimant carried her burden. After his findings on such fact question, it cannot be interfered with on appeal unless there is not sufficient material or competent evidence in the record to warrant it. Enfield v. The Certain-Teed Prod. Co., supra; Flint v. City of Eldon,
We said in Bushing v. Iowa Railway
&
Light Co., supra,
We also said therein, at page 1018 of 208 Iowa, page 723 of 226 N.W.: “An injury occurs in the course of the employment when it is within the period of the employment, at a place where the employee reasonably may be in performing his duties, and while he is fulfilling those duties or engaged in doing something incidental thereto.”
The employee’s departure from the usual place of employment must amount to an abandonment of employment or be an act wholly foreign to his usual work. Shoffler v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.,
But an employee does not cease to be in the course of his employment merely because he is not actually engaged in
doing some specifically prescribed task, if, in the course of his. employment, he does some act which he deems necessary for the benefit or interest of his employer. Associated Employers’ Reciprocal v. State Industrial Comm.,
As heretofore pointed out, we find no restrictions on teachers’ judgment or discretion as to their acts for the welfare of the children and, in fact, their relationship as employees of the school district with the children abhors such a concept. It is true there must be a causal connection between the conditions which the employer puts about the employee and the resulting injury. But if it reasonably appears from all the facts and circumstances there is a causal connection, liability generally follows. The trial court said, and we agree:
“It is clear that the job of teaching school is not one where a time clock is punched, and much has been said about the duties and responsibilities of a schoolteacher not only to the children, their education, their health, their welfare, but responsibilities tobecome a part of and take part in the activities of the community where they are employed.”
Good teachers are concerned over the welfare of their students. They are second only to the parent in concern over the child’s welfare, and communities expect nothing less. They often, as was planned here, stay at or return to the schoolhouse at night for plays, games and other school activities, rendering many other services to the students and the community beyond that of mere classroom instruction. It is expected, if not actually required of such teachers, by most employer school districts. Plaintiff explained her interest in the busses as follows: “Well, I have an interest in them while the children are in them, to know whether they get home.” Mrs. Johnson said: “We are,always interested in what the children are doing — ehildren arriving and getting home safely, to school safely, is always my interest.”
While it is true, as urged by defendants, that these teachers were not, as a part of their regular duties, responsible for the loading of the busses or the transportation of the children, yet if the children had been returned to the school by the bus drivers after an unsuccessful attempt to negotiate the highway, who would say it was not the teachers’ duty to look after and supervise the ehildren until they could have been taken home 1 Who would contend they would not have done so? It is not at all surprising or unusual for teachers to be concerned over the children’s safety, and it was perhaps contemplated here that in fulfilling their duty of looking after and caring for the children, such tasks as the teachers were then performing were reasonably contemplated as incidental. Walker v. Speeder Mach. Corp., supra,
It is true unless a relationship of duty and injury exists no recovery is possible, and if it were conceded that the trip was made only to discover whether or not the teachers might safely travel, abandonment of the occupation would result and no recovery would be possible. Pohler v. T. W. Snow Constr. Co.,
The trial court agreed with the commissioner’s finding that plaintiff had met the test and that she was in a place where she reasonably might have been in the performance of her duty as a teacher, that she had not abandoned her employment at the time, and was therefore entitled to recover, as having suffered an injury arising out of and in the course of her employment. We agree.
The plaintiff’s acts were reasonably found to have been on behalf of the employer school district whose business it was to transport, teach and care for the general welfare of the children while away to school. We are satisfied there was a direct causal connection between plaintiff’s injury and the general and incidental requirements or duties contemplated by her employer— understood if not expressed —
II. The employer of course is not an insurer of the safety of the employee. Any time the employee steps aside from the line of duty in the employment or violates a rule or restriction by departing from the course of his employment, compensation coverage ceases. Pohler v. T. W. Snow Constr. Co., supra,
III. It seems unnecessary to include herein the statement that the workmen’s compensation statute is to be liberally construed so as to get within the spirit rather than only within the letter of the law. Bidwell Coal Co. v. Davidson,
In conclusion, we find no merit in the defendants’ three listed trial court errors. We hold the evidence was sufficient to justify a finding by the commissioner that the accident did arise out of the employment, that the facts and circumstances shown justify the determination by the commissioner that the accident did arise in the course of the employment, and that there was a causal connection between the duty the plaintiff was performing and the injury such as to justify her recovery.
Plaintiff met the test and has shown satisfactorily that she was doing what a teacher so employed may reasonably do within a time during which she is employed, and at a place where she
may reasonably be during that time. Christensen v. Hauff Bros., supra,
As there was no contest as to the reasonableness or correctness of the commissioner’s finding as to the award if liability were found to exist, we hold the award of the commissioner as decreed in favor of the plaintiff by the trial court must be affirmed.- — Affirmed.
