52 A.2d 370 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1947
Argued March 4, 1947.
In this workmen's compensation case the question is whether the claimant-appellant was injured in the course of her employment, on the premises of her employer, within the meaning of § 301 (c) of the Workmen's Compensation Act,
The employer-defendant was a fourth-floor tenant of premises at 312 Penn Avenue in the city of Scranton, under a sublease from the lessee of the whole building. Such claimant, on her way to work in the fourth-floor business place of her employer, is "on the premises of the [her] employer" while in the halls, stairs or elevators of the buildings in which the business is: DiCicco v.Downs Carpet Company, Inc.,
A peculiar situation exists in a part of the city of Scranton, including the 300 block of Penn Avenue, as to lots laid out in the original town plot. Therein each lot includes what is colloquially called a "ten-foot reservation",1 between the lot proper and its building and the street as laid out. Thus, there is a cartway, paralleled by a ten-foot sidewalk (the two constituting Penn Avenue), in turn paralleled by the "reservation" ten feet wide, which thus separates the lots from the street, i.e., cartway and sidewalk. The owner of each lot along this "reservation" has the right, under the deeds, "toenclose, occupy and use ten (10) feet in front of the front line of said lots for yard, vault, porch, piazza, bay-window and cellarway." (Emphasis supplied.) The lot owner may therefore not erect a building upon the "reservation", but he must cross it to reach his building from the sidewalk of the street. It is as though the lot lines extended to the street, with a building restriction as to the front ten feet. *590
Some of the lot and building owners in the 300 block of Penn Avenue have erected skylights, trapdoors and cellarways on the "reservation".2 The owner of 312 Penn Avenue has built no structures on it, but instead has extended the paving from the city sidewalk to his building line, and this is usable by pedestrians. It is conceded that this owner has not lost his right to use the reservation or to erect the allowed structures thereon, or to inclose it completely or fence it, at any time desired.
Mary Dougherty, the claimant, was an employe of the defendant, whose place of business was on the fourth floor of 312 Penn Avenue, subleased from the lessee of the whole building. She was on her way to work and in order to get from the sidewalk to the building she had, of necessity, to cross the "reservation". From the public thoroughfare to the doorway of the building there was no other means of access to her place of work. It was analogous to an uninclosed hallway to or in the building.
Whether the claimant was, when injured, "employed" within the statutory definition of "premises of the employer" is a question of law where the facts are undisputed: DiCicco v. Downs CarpetCompany, Inc.,
If the "reservation" had been inclosed by a fence with a wicket therein (as the owner concededly has the right) it would be apparent that after the employe passed through the gate she was on the premises of her employer. In such respect there is no difference between the employe of the occupier of the whole building and the employe of a tenant thereof. The "reservation" was the only means of ingress, egress and regress of the building and her employer's place of business. The benefits of the Act cannot turn upon whether the owner inclosed it, as he had a right to do, or left it open, as he did. *591
The "ten-foot reservation" being the exclusive access to the building in which the claimant was employed, she was, in this case, injured on the premises of her employer and was entitled to compensation, unless, and only unless, there was evidence that the public had an actual, enforcible right to use the "reservation" longitudinally, at its will, i.e., a dedication or right in the public by prescription, or some similar right. Of this there was no evidence. It therefore follows that the public use of the "reservation" longitudinally, and as if it were a sidewalk, was permissive by the owner of the "reservation", who in turn was the owner of the building in which defendant was a tenant. If the halls, stairways and elevators within the building were permissively used by members of the public having no business there, such public use could not deprive the claimant of compensation if she was on her way to work and injured thereon.
The referee and board found the facts, which are not in dispute, and correctly awarded compensation.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the record is remitted with directions to enter judgment on the award in favor of the claimant and against the defendants.