General Statutes § 31-293a provides that when one employee is injured by the negligence of another, the negligent employee is immune from suit unless the action “is based on the fellow employee’s negligence in the operation of a motor vehicle . . . .” In
Dias
v.
Adams,
*352 Both the plaintiff, Daniel Kuhar, and the named defendant, Stephen Phillips, were employees of another defendant, Gaetano Vitti, who did business as the service station. On December 23, 2002, Phillips was in a motor vehicle being repaired on the premises, examining the vehicle’s lock cylinder. He turned the key, believing that the vehicle would not move. Phillips was wrong. The vehicle, which was in gear, lurched forward and injured Kuhar.
On September 8, 2003, Kuhar commenced this action by service of process against Phillips, Vitti and the owner of the vehicle in question. The first count of Kuhar’s amended complaint (the only count in question here) claims that Kuhar’s injuries were caused by the negligence of Phillips in operating the vehicle and its ignition.
On February 9, 2005, Phillips filed the motion for summary judgment now before the court. The motion claims that the action is barred by the immunity provision of § 31-293a. The motion was argued on April 25, 2005.
Although the text of § 31-293a is arguably broad enough to exclude any claim of a “fellow employee’s negligence in the operation of a motor vehicle” from the immunity provision of that statute, the exception in question has been more narrowly construed by the Supreme Court. As mentioned, the court, in
Dias
v.
Adams,
supra,
Dias
involved a construction worker who was installing sewer pipes in a trench. The worker was struck by a backhoe and fatally injured. The court held that this accident was attributable to “the special hazards of the work place . . . .” Id., 359. Similarly, in
Fields
v.
Giron,
Kuhar states in his affidavit that “friends and customers” often socialized in the garage and work bay areas of the service station. The possibility of the public intruding on the workplace is not, however, determinative. A hiker doubtless could have walked into the outdoor work areas at issue in
Dias
and
Fields.
The crucial distinction was indicated by Judge Corradino in a decision subsequently affirmed by the Supreme Court. The person injured “was not facing the hazards encountered by the general public as motorists or even pedestrians walking on or alongside a highway open to the public.”
Ferreira
v.
Pisaturo,
*354
The accident that happened to Kuhar was simply not the result of what the legislature (as construed by the courts) considered to be “the operation of a motor vehicle.” An ordinary motor vehicle accident occurring, for example, on a city street or supermarket parking lot has “a less distinct relationship to the hazards of the employment” than the kind of accident that happened here. The accident here happened in a workplace and occurred because of the special hazards of that particular workplace. Kuhar and Phillips were not members of a visiting social circle. They were employees paid to repair motor vehicles in a garage. If a hypothetical member of the general public had intruded into the work area while socializing and been injured by the incident that injured Kuhar, the accident would nevertheless have occurred because of “the special hazards of the work place . . . .”
Dias
v.
Adams,
supra,
Under these circumstances, there is no genuine issue of any material fact. Practice Book § 17-49. The accident that occurred here was a “special hazard of the work place,” and Phillips is statutorily immune from suit.
The named defendant’s motion for summary judgment is, therefore, granted.
