The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case involves a claim for compensation under the workmen’s compensation law. Samuel G. Kennedy was an employee of the Hull & Dillon Packing Company, and had been for about twenty-five years, and on June 20, 1928, suffered an injury which resulted in his death. The plaintiff, his widow, made a claim for compensation, and she was allowed compensation in the amount of $4,000, and the sum of $150 for funeral expenses. The
Samuel G. Kennedy was a traveling salesman and collector for the packing company located at Pittsburg, Crawford county, Kansas, and Kennedy was a resident of Pittsburg. His salary was $33 per week, and he was allowed not to exceed $22 per week for expenses. The packing company allotted him certain territory in which to solicit and collect. He was expected to call on the trade in the territory allotted to him, being the towns of Opolis, in Crawford county, Kansas; Columbus, Crestline, Galena and Lawton in Cherokee county, Kansas; Hoclcerville, Quapaw, Century, Picher, Carden and Commerce, in Ottawa county, Oklahoma; Waco, As-bury, Carl Junction and Smithfield, in Jasper county, Missouri. On the morning of June 20, 1928, he started on a trip from Pitts-burg, expecting to make his first call at Crestline, in Cherokee county, and when he reached a point eight and one-half miles south of Pittsburg, he ran into an electric wire which had been thrown across the road in a storm, and was killed.
The contention of the defendant is that his death did not arise out of and in the course of his employment, in that he was on his way to assume the duties of his employment but had not reached the first stopping place on the trip. The first town that he was to make that day was Crestline, which was about sixteen miles from Pittsburg. It is insisted that Pittsburg, his home, from which he was traveling, although in the county of Crawford, was not one of the towns he was to make, and that he was not required to live at Pittsburg, where the plant is located. The orders that were taken by him were reported to the packing company by telephone, and no direct evidence was produced as to his going to the office of the plant when he turned in the money collected and made settlements with the defendant packing company. It was shown that the pay roll closed on each Saturday and the workmen were paid the following Tuesday. The evidence is that at all times when traveling in his district he was under the supervision of his employer. Since he was a traveling salesman in a designated territory, the traveling was a part of his duty, and he was at liberty to select his course in going from one store to another within that territory. The commissioner found that such a salesman is a necessary part of the trade or business of the packing company, and is as necessary a
It is claimed that the defendant was operating under the workmen’s compensation law, and that Kennedy was one of its employees, who solicited orders for its products in an allotted territory and made collections from its customers. Being a traveling salesman, he was required to use the highways in calling on customers within the zone assigned to him. In that zone were the towns already mentioned in Crawford and Cherokee counties, Kansas, Ottawa county, Oklahoma, and Jasper county, Missouri, and he was traveling towards Crestline, in "Cherokee county, when he was injured and killed. Was he within the allotted zone of his operations and in the course of his employment so as to make the injury a compensable one? If his duties as traveling salesman re~ quired him to travel over the highway where he was killed, with its well-known hazards, one of which he encountered, the action should be regarded to be in his working place and in the course of his employment. (Tierney v. Telephone Co., 114 Kan. 706, 220 Pac. 190.) It is contended that he was not in the allotted territory until he reached Crestline, the first town he was to visit upon that day. It is claimed that he could choose his own place of residence, and that if he chose a residence out of his territory and was on his way to assume the duties of his employment at the time of the accident,
' We find no merit in the claim that the injury is not compensable on the theory that the death of Kennedy was caused by an act of God. There had been a storm the night before the accident, which had blown down poles and wires, but the storm had ceased and the poles and wires had not been removed from the highway. Kennedy was not killed during the storm or exclusively by the' violence of nature. He came to his death by coming in contact with' high-voltage wires, a human agency or rather an instrumentality of
Although there is a contrary contention, it cannot be held that there was no causal connection between the employment of Kennedy and the injury. It is said that the hazard was one common to all persons using the highway. His work involved daily traveling over the highways in the performance of his duties and it became his place of work. His employment enjoined upon him traveling from place to place within his territory almost continuously in the discharge of his duties. He was using the highway in his employer’s service when he was injured and was much more exposed to its hazards than people generally. We think that the service and injury were clearly an incident of his employment. (Pegg v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 129 Kan. 413, 283 Pac. 58, and cases cited; Capital Paper Co. v. Conner, 81 Ind. App. 545.)
Nor can we hold that Kennedy was engaged in interstate commerce or in commerce of any kind in his employment with defendant so as to be excluded from the benefits of the compensation act.
The judgment is affirmed.