A claimant before the Industrial Commission must prove that the injury sustained was the result of an accident arising out of and in the course of employment. The phrase “arising out of the employment” refers to the origin or cause of the accident and the phrase “in the course of the employment” refers to the time, place and circumstances under which the injury occurred.
Bass v. Mecklenburg County,
The Commission found that the three salesmen rotated their Saturday duties so that only one of them would be working in the shop on any given Saturday and each salesman worked his turn, it being plaintiff’s turn on the date in question. Further, the findings show that plaintiff, at the request of the employer, went from the office to the shop and did whatever he saw that there was to be done without having been given any specific assignment. He also had previously obtained permission “to work on [the] doghouse in the employer’s shop during working hours when he had nothing else to do and to use ‘scrap’ material to build the doghouse.”
The Commission found that, at the time of the accident, claimant was a full-time salesman, that he had finished his training program and that he was performing an act personal to himself. These findings are not determinative of the issues.
Other findings of the Commission disclose that, whether called a “salesman” or trainee, at the time and place of the accident one of the duties of -his employment was to operate a power saw and that he had operated the saw to cut cabinet parts on the morning of the accident. Certainly one of the risks incidental to employment as a power saw operator is that of getting cut. The finding by the Commission that the particular piece of wood being sawed was destined for a doghouse instead of a cabinet does not alter the fact that claimant was injured while exposed to a risk of his employment in the operation of a power saw. These facts distinguish the case on appeal from
Bell v. Dewey Brothers, Inc.,
Nor do we consider as determinative the Commission finding that the use of the saw at the time of the accident to cut a board for claimant’s doghouse “in no way furthered the employer’s business.” In
Stubblefield v. Construction Co.,
In the present case all of the facts found by the Commission disclose that at the time of the accident the employee was where he was authorized to be at a time he was authorized to
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be there and was engaged in an activity specifically authorized by his employer. It is distinguishable from
Jones v. Desk Company,
Though not binding, several cases from other jurisdictions are of interest to us in our decision.
In
Maheux v. Cove-Craft, Inc.,
The New Hampshire Commissioner of Labor also denied compensation to the survivors of an employee who worked as a boiler tender at a tanning plant and who was killed when he drove his automobile into his employer’s carpentry shop during working hours, jacked the automobile up in order to work on a
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broken torsion bar and had the auto fall on top of him.
Hanchett v. Brezner Tanning Company,
In a Georgia case, the rule has been stated that, “If an employee, while doing something in the interest of his employer, is simultaneously engaged in an act personally beneficial to himself, the service to the employer is not broken, and any injury received by him at that time as the result of the ordinary exposures of his employment, is an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, and particularly so where the cause for the employee’s engaging in such act personally beneficial to himself is the reasonable result of his employment.”
Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co. v. Souther,
In
Wamhoff v. Wagner Electric Corp.,
For the reasons stated we hold that the Commission’s conclusion of law that claimant did not sustain an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment is not supported by its findings of fact which are pertinent to this *483 appeal. The order from which claimant appealed is reversed and the cause is remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
