98 Pa. Super. 581 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1930
Argued March 5, 1930. The referee and the Workmen's Compensation Board awarded compensation to plaintiff. The court below sustained exceptions and vacated the award. Plaintiff appeals.
The facts in the case are not in dispute. Plaintiff was employed as a contract miner in defendant's colliery No. 7 and worked in tunnel No. 29. Coal mined in this tunnel is transported over a narrow gauge railroad to No. 7 breaker where it is prepared for market. The railroad passes near the washhouse maintained by defendant for the use of such of its employees at colliery No. 7 as may desire to use it. This washhouse is approximately 5,900 feet from tunnel No. 29. There is also a public highway leading from the vicinity of No. 7 breaker to a point near the mouth of No. 29 tunnel. Most of the men who work in tunnel No. 29 travel the bed of the railroad instead of the highway in going to the washhouse. After working two and a half hours on the morning of the accident claimant, whose two laborers had not reported for work, stopped work and started home, going by the way of the washhouse where he intended to stop and change his clothes. Leaving tunnel No. 29 he followed the railroad tracks toward the washhouse. Soon after starting he was overtaken by a locomotive drawing eight loaded cars and one empty car. The engineer slowed down in order to permit claimant to get aboard. He boarded the locomotive and shortly thereafter the locomotive collided with a train of cars and claimant sustained the injuries for which compensation is sought. *584
The referee found that claimant "was upon the premises of his employer when injured;" that "the accident was caused by the operation of the employer's business upon said premises;" that he was on his way from the "place of his employment to the washhouse" and was following "the customary route taken by the employees to reach the washhouse."
The question is, was claimant injured in the course of his employment? "Under the Compensation Act an injury in the course of employment embraces all injuries received while engaged in furthering the business of the employer, and injuries received on the premises, subject to these limitations: (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": Shoffler v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.
Appellant endeavors to escape from the application of the foregoing legal principles by reason of the facts that he was going to the washhouse to change his clothes when he was injured, and that the Act of June 2, 1891, P.L. 176, provides that it shall be the duty of *586
the operator of an anthracite coal mine, when requested in writing by twenty or more men employed in the mine, to provide a suitable building which shall be convenient to the principal entrance of such mine for the use of persons employed therein for the purpose of washing themselves and changing their clothes when entering the mine and returning therefrom. It is earnestly urged in his behalf by his able counsel that when defendant established the washhouse all paths and routes which the employees were permitted to take from the mine to the washhouse were a part of the premises. We are unable to adopt that view. There is nothing in this Act of 1891, or the rules of the defendant company, which requires the employees to use the washhouse. The use of this facility was optional with each employee. "It cannot be said that an employee's rights depend on the place where he changes his clothes...... The place where the employee dressed had no bearing on the employer's business": Houlehan v. Pullman Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.