142 A. 201 | Conn. | 1928
Lead Opinion
The commissioner made an award of compensation to the plaintiff-claimant, from which defendants appealed. The Superior Court reserved the case upon the finding of the commissioner for the advice of this court. On December 23d 1926, the plaintiff was and had been for less than two weeks prior to this date in the employ of the defendant-employers and at work upon the State highway in the town of Cheshire. The plaintiff lived in the village of *504
West Cheshire. The only way in which he could reach his work was through transportation furnished by the defendant-employers in one of their trucks which stopped for him in the morning usually at a point on the State road and carried him to his place of work. It ordinarily came along in time to get the men to their work at six-thirty a.m. On the stated morning, the plaintiff left his home and walked to the State road where the truck usually picked him up. It was late on this morning; the weather was cold, and because of this the plaintiff walked along the road in order to keep warm, and upon its left side. The truck came up with him, and stopped on the right-hand side of the road for him to board it. While plaintiff was crossing the highway to board the standing truck he was struck by an automobile and sustained a fracture of the femur. The commissioner held upon these facts that the plaintiff when injured was doing something incidental to his employment, and that the injury arose out of and in the course of his employment. The defendants claimed that as the plaintiff had not actually boarded the truck, he was not on premises controlled by the employers, and consequently the injury did not arise out of and in the course of his employment. If plaintiff's injury occurred in the course of his employment, manifestly it must have arisen out of the employment. The sole question for our determination is, did plaintiff's injury arise in the course of his employment? "`In the course' of points to the place and circumstances under which the accident takes place and the time when it occurred". An injury is "said to arise in the course of his [the employee's] employment when it occurs within the period of his employment, at a place where he may reasonably be, and while he is reasonably fulfilling the duties of his employment, or engaged in doing something *505
incidental to it." Larke v. Hancock Mutual Life Ins.Co.,
The defendant-employers furnished the plaintiff transportation to and from his place of work. The work began when the employee reached the place of work. The employment certainly included the period of transportation, for that was by the terms of the employment made incidental to it by the express agreement of the employers. And we have held that the relation of master and servant exists during the period of transportation whether the transportation be under the express agreement of the employer, or by his implied consent inferred from his knowledge of the practice of transporting the employee and his expectation that this practice would continue. Swanson
v. Latham,
In all of the cases we have had before us, raising the question whether the transportation was an incident of the employment, the injury to the employee occurred while he was being transported in the conveyance furnished by the employer with his express or implied consent. Our attention is particularly directed by defendants' counsel to the statement in Swanson v.Latham, supra, that "the employment [of Swanson] began when the decedent boarded the automobile at Willimantic," and from this counsel argue that the employment of the plaintiff had not begun when he was injured while crossing the highway for the purpose of boarding the truck upon which the employers furnished plaintiff transportation to his work. Upon the facts in that case the statement was correct, the employment did begin when the employee boarded the automobile. We did not intend by this statement to exclude other conditions which the employer might expressly or impliedly have attached to the employment, and which had their inception prior to the boarding of the automobile. Thus, the employer might designate the place where the automobile was to be boarded; it might be on private property or on *507 a public highway. If the employee went to the designated place within a reasonable time prior to the time when he was to board the automobile, he would, from the time he reached the designated place, be then carrying out the direction of his employer, and that direction would become an incident of the employment and a part of the means of transportation, just as a railway station, or a bus waiting room, is a necessary incident in the transportation of the passengers of the railway or bus line.
Similarly, when an employee is directed to report each morning at a given place, or to a certain person, to receive instruction as to where he is required to work that day, the relation of master and servant has been held to commence at the time he reported, and his employment to have begun at that time, and that the injury thereafter occurring, prior to the time of actually beginning work, was suffered in the course of his employment. Milwaukee v. Althoff,
The Superior Court is advised to render its judgment dismissing the appeal from the commissioner.
In this opinion HAINES and HINMAN, Js., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
"It is undoubtedly the general rule that employees whose area of employment is within defined limits, are not regarded as in the course of their employment while going to and returning from work upon the public highways; nor do the risks incidental to travel on such highways ordinarily arise out of their employment. This is so, because the ordinary contract of employment of a workman to render service at a designated place does not cover his movements outside of that place. He uses the highways as the public uses them, because he must, and *510
not because his employer by the terms or implications of his contract of employment has the right to require him to use them at the employer's will." Lake v.Bridgeport,
"The statute is not applicable to an injury which arises through a danger or hazard dissociated from or not inherent in the nature of the employment as its source and to which the employee would have been equally exposed apart from the employment. This conclusion is not affected by the fact that the employee would not, except for the employment, have been where such danger or hazard existed. An injury does not arise out of the employment unless the hazard causing it is, within rational apprehension, an attribute of or peculiar to the specific duties of the employment." *511 Kowalek v. New York Consolidated R.Co.,
If an employee were struck by an automobile while waiting in the street to enter the door of the factory where he was employed, or, finding it closed, while passing along the street to another door, or while crossing the street to it, I apprehend that he would not be permitted an award of compensation. That case is strictly analogous to the one before us. As soon as the plaintiff had embarked upon the transportation furnished by his employers, he would come within the zone of his employment, but while he was proceeding from his home to the State road, while he was standing upon or passing along that road waiting for the truck, and while he was crossing the road to it, he was not engaged in doing anything which was in the course of his employment or incidental to it, but was using the highways as would any pedestrian properly traveling over them. The risks he assumed were those of the traveling public, not those growing out of his employment or its incidents. That being so, it cannot be said that the injury arose in the course of his employment.
In this opinion BANKS, J., concurred.