This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. Walter Shell and Robert Atwood, employees of appellant, were killed in an accident, and their dependents were awarded compensation. The Board’s award- was confirmed by the Circuit Court.
" The sole and significant issue is whether or not compensation is payable when an employee on his way home from work is injured or killed on the property of'the employer, as the result of a defective condition of a vehicle, not furnished or controlled by the employer, in which he is being transported.
The accident occurred on a road constructed and maintained by appellant on its own premises. It extended from . appellant’s coal mine on a mountain to a public highway, and was used by employees and others having business with the. Company. The two fatally injured workmen were riding in a -truck owned' a.nd operated -by one-Paterson,-who--was not an employee of appellant. The .truck, ran off the road because of -some -mechanical defect in- the ■steering- gear.-' .
*925 Paterson made daily trips over this road transporting employees to and from the highway under an arrangement made with them through their union. He was paid a consideration by the men for. this service. He was not paid by the employer, nor, did the employer exercise any control over him or his truck. It was not necessary that the employees avail themselves of this, means of transportation, as they could walk from work down the roadway, or use other pathways leading from the mine.
To be compensable under Kentucky law, an injury or death must be sustained or result from ah accident “arising out of and in the course of * * employment.” KRS 342.005(1). As stated in A. C. Lawrence Leather Co. v. Barnhill,
It is evident there must be some causal relationship between the accident and the employment. In January-Wood Co. v. Schumacher,
In Billiter, Miller & McClure v. Hickman,
Iri Draper v. Railway Accessories Co.,
In A. C. Lawrence Leather Co. v. Barnhill,
In Wilson Berger Coal Co. v. Brown,
Three cases from foreign jurisdictions should be noted. In Konopka v. Jackson County Road Commission, Appts.,
In Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Green, Tex.Civ.App.,
The Colorado Supreme Court reached an opposite conclusion in Industrial Commission of Colorado v. Enyeart,
While the courts in deciding the above cases emphasized particular factors, it seems to us that no one consideration is necessarily controlling. Whether or not the accident happens on the employer’s premises, or he has control of the instrumentality causing the injury, or the employer benefits from the employee’s off-duty activities, may or may not be significant.
Most of the cases involving the type of _ question we have here may be reconciled if we return to fundamentals and re-examine the purpose ' of Workmen’s Compensation laws. Basically they are designed to indemnify the. employee from financial loss resulting from
exposure to industrial hazards.
In this mechanized age, a fair legislative policy imposes on industry (and ultimately the public) the obligation to compensate those whose limbs and lives are endangered by the machine. Liability, is not based upon negligence or fault of the employer, but the employee is in essence insured against losses arising from
the perils of his work.
See Schneider’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, 3d ed., Vol. 1, Section 5. As pointed out in Warfield Natural Gas Co. v. Muncy,
If we bear the above principle in mind, there is a sound basis for the general rule that injuries received in accidents which occur while the employee is on his way to or from work are not compensable. See W. T. Congleton Co. v. Bradley,
Where the employer furnishes the transportation, he thereby adopts a special means of bringing his employee to and from work, and it may be said the accompanying dangers are directly connected with the employment, and in a sense are peculiar to that particular industrial activity. Likewise, where the injury is caused by the condition of the employer’s premises, while being properly used by the employee, we may say the hazard created is incident to the employment.
It is significant that under the circumstances just mentioned, the employer has it within his power to minimize the risks. Apparently this consideration has influenced decisions emphasizing the employer’s “control” of the premises or instrumentalities which cause the injury. The question of dominion is not determinative to the extent that we could say its existence imposes liability and lack of it exonerates the employer. It is, however, a forceful factor in determining whether or not the cause of the injury was an occupational hazard created or maintained by him. Such consideration would have justified the decision in the case of Wilson Berger Coal Co. v. Brown,
In the light of the foregoing analysis, the decision in this case becomes relatively simple. The deceased employees at the time of the accident were not performing any duties for the employer. ■ They had quit work, left the immediate “zone” of their employment, and were using a means of transportation of their own selection. The cause of the accident was a mechanical defect in the truck, not connected with their employment, nor brought about by the condition of the employer’s premises. The peril on this trip was the same one which threatens any person riding in a motor vehicle, and neither the employer nor the occupation created or contributed to it. It follows that their deaths were in no way related to the hazards of their employment, and consequently could not be said to have arisen out of and in the course of it.
The judgments are reversed, with directions to remand the case to the Workmen’s. Compensation Board for dismissal of the applications for compensation.
