EMPLOYERS INSURANCE COMPANY OF ALABAMA et al. v. BASS.
32791
Court of Appeals of Georgia
MARCH 9, 1950
March 30, 1950
81 Ga. App. 306
WORRILL, J.
2. “An injury arises ‘in the course of employment,’ within the meaning of the
3. Where the evidence authorized a finding by the director and by the board upon review, that the deceased employee, the 48-year-old husband of the claimant, went to work for the employer as a carpenter on a Friday, and worked on that day in a building which was a part of an extensive apartment house building project of the employer; that the employee, as was the custom, furnished his own carpenter‘s tools which he kept and carried in a toolbox weighing between 35 and 80 pounds; that on leaving work on that day he carried his tools away from the project with him, though the employer furnished a locked storage box in which he was free to leave his tools overnight; that on the following Monday morning the employee returned to the employer‘s field office on the project premises to ascertain whether or not they would work that day as it was raining that morning; that the employer‘s carpenter foreman, at about 7:45 a.m. told the employee to report back to building No. 51 where he had worked the previous Friday, which building was situated some 380 yards from the field office; that the employee picked up his toolbox and walked 300 yards carrying it, set the toolbox down, and fell dead at a place on the employer‘s premises, but some 80 yards from the location where he had been instructed by the foreman to go to work; that a minute or so thereafter the employer‘s warning whistle or siren, which customarily sounded at five
Judgment affirmed. MacIntyre, P. J., and Gardner and Townsend, JJ., concur. Sutton, C. J., and Felton, J., dissent.
SUTTON, C. J., and FELTON, J., dissenting. Assuming that the claimant‘s husband was an employee at the time he died, he had not entered upon his labors. His death came about as a result of a purely personal obligation and undertaking, carrying his tools to his job. The fact that the misfortune occurred on the premises of the employer is incidental and irrelevant to the issue. If the employee had obtained permission to go to work by telephone, and had died while carrying his tools to work before he reached the premises, the case would be the same. In this case the injury was not caused by a hazard of the employment or one present on the premises. The carrying of the tools was a personal obligation of the deceased, performed in preparation for work and in our opinion the case does not come within any exception to the rule that injuries occurring while persons are going to and from work are not compensable.
It is well settled that, in order for an accidental injury to be compensable under the
DECIDED MARCH 9, 1950. ADHERED TO ON REHEARING MARCH 30, 1950.
C. Baxter Jones, Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy, for plaintiffs in error.
T. Elton Drake, Fraser & Irwin, contra.
