27 A.2d 542 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued May 5, 1942. Claimant, following the death of her husband, was denied compensation and the lower court entered judgment for defendant. Her appeal raises the question whether decedent, who was fatally injured in an automobile accident in the State of New Jersey, was then engaged in his master's business.
Under the applicable amendment, the Act of June 4, 1937, P.L. 1552, § 301c,
There is no dispute as to the facts. Claimant's husband, P. Joseph Hess, was the `supreme' secretary of defendant fraternal beneficial society in charge of its office in Pittsburgh, where its business was conducted. The society was a member of the Catholic Central Verein, a national society organized in the interests of constituent local societies such as defendant. Hess was one of the delegates, duly elected by defendant society to attend the annual convention of the Verein to be held in the City of Bethlehem on August 20, 1938. Instead of traveling to Bethlehem directly, on the eve of the convention, he left Pittsburgh with three others on August 16, 1938 in an automobile, upon a pleasure trip wholly unrelated to the business of defendant. While on vacation from his employment with defendant, the party drove through New York State, stopping *578 at various places, finally reaching New York City on the night of August 18. They left the next morning and while en route through New Jersey on their way to Bethlehem, their car collided with another automobile and Hess received injuries from which he died the following day.
The compensation act does not apply to accidents outside the State "except accidents occurring to employes whose duties require them to go temporarily beyond the territorial limits of the Commonwealth." 1937 amendment, supra, § 1,
Regardless of the fact that the injury occurred in another State, claimant is barred by the application of settled law. In general "where an employee voluntarily, and without necessity, abandons his employment, he suspends the relation of employer and employee. . . . . ." And to support a claim for compensation "(1) the employee's presence must ordinarily be required at the place of injury, or, (2) if not so required, the departure of the servant from the usual place of employment must not amount to an abandonment of employment or be an act wholly foreign to his usual work; it must be merely an innocent or inconsequential departure from the line or place of duty . . . . . . [But] the incident necessary to constitute a break in the course *579
of employment must be of a pronounced character": Shoffler v.Lehigh Val. Coal Co., supra. Decedent's departure from Pittsburgh on a vacation from all duties was an abandonment of his employment for the period, within which the injury occurred. The term `course of employment' embraces intervals for leisure within the regular hours of the working day on the premises (Dzikowskav. Superior Steel Co.,
There can be no recovery in this case because of abandonment of employment and no duty required *580 decedent to go beyond the limits of the Commonwealth. We, therefore, need not refer to questions raised by other assignments of error.
Judgment affirmed.