Code § 114-303 provides in substance that every injured employee shall within thirty days give to his employer notice of the accident or no compensation shall be payable, “unless it can be shown . . . that the employee had been prevented from doing so by reason of physical or mental incapacity, or by fraud or deceit, or that the employer, his agent, representative, or foreman, or the immediate superior of the injured employee, had knowledge of the accident, or unless a reasonable excuse is made to the satisfaction of the Department of Industrial Relations for not giving such notice, and it is reasonably proved to the satisfaction of the Department that the employer had not been prejudiced thereby.” The purpose of this provision is undoubtedly to prevent the belated filing of claims which might work a fraud or injustice upon the employer. The employer here received no formal notice until February 6, 1952, which was more than 30 days after Elliott’s death on December 15, 1951, but the employer did have notice that Elliott was “sick” on the job, and was too ill the following day to return to work. Whether this in itself is sufficient to constitute notice of an “accident” under the compensation law, it is unnecessary to decide, but it is a circumstance which might have been considered by the board in finding, as a matter of fact, that failure to give the proper notice was excusable and that the claim should not thereby be barred. As stated in
James
v.
Fite,
38
Ga. App.
759 (2) (
The defendant further contends that the award was without evidence to support it, in that a finding was demanded that Elliott was not an employee but was an independent contractor, citing
Bentley v. Jones,
48
Ga. App. 587
(
The question is next raised as to whether there was any evidence to support the finding that the deceased suffered death resulting proximately from a heart attack to which the exertion of his employment contributed as a proximate precipitating factor. That there was such evidence cannot be disputed, since the only physician testifying gave as his positive opinion that such was the case. In this the case differs from
Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.
v.
Harden,
85
Ga. App.
830 (
*271
Exception is also made to the director’s finding that the average weekly wages of the deceased employee were in excess of $48 per week and in computing compensation accordingly. It appeared from the evidence that the deceased worked as he obtained employment; that he averaged less than one day per month working for the defendant, but did many other jobs; that he worked nine hours on the day he was stricken; and that employees .of the defendant regularly worked eight hours per day, five and one-half days per week. Code (Ann. Supp.) § 114-402 (3), the only method of computation here, provides that the full-time weekly wage of the injured employee shall be used in computing the amount of the award. In
New Amsterdam Casualty Co.
v.
Brown,
81
Ga. App.
790 (2 b) (
The judge of the superior court did not err in affirming the award of the Board of Workmen’s Compensation.
Judgment affirmed.
