Opinion by
In this workmen’s compensation case Anna E. Lints seeks compensation for certain injuries alleged to have been the result of an accidental fall occurring in the course of her employment with the defendant, Delaware Ribbon Manufacturers, Inc. The compensation authorities made an award, the Court of Common Pleas No. 5 of Philadelphia County, after dismissing the appeal, entered judgment on the award, and this appeal was taken by the employer and its insurance carrier.
Pennsylvania Ribbon Manufacturers is the owner of a three-story building with a basement and sub-basement “which is considered a four-story building”, located at Seventh and Somerset Streets in Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Ribbon leased to the defendant the third floor and the second floor annex of the building, reserving for its own use the first floor and the basement and the first floor annex. A cafeteria in a portion of the building reserved by Pennsylvania Ribbon is located on the Somerset Street side of the lower basement of the building with, a direct entrance from Somerset Street. .
The claimant was employed by Delaware Ribbon in its plant to perform a task known' as “barreling”. The employer scheduled a Christmas party for its employes to be held in Pennsylvania Ribbon’s cafeteria
If it be ascertained that an accident occurred off the employer’s premises, it must affirmatively appear that the injured employe was “actually engaged in the furtherance of the business or affairs of the employer” at the time of the accident. Fulwiler v. MackInternational Motor Truck Corp.,
The word “premises” in the act is limited to the property of the employer used in connection with the actual place of. work where the employer carries on
Claimant testified that when she and her friends left the party they went “outside of the building” and “around in back of the shop”. The area traveled was a part of the plant claimant had never “been around” before. When she attempted to re-enter the building she “opened this door” and fell into the “boiler room”. The uncontradicted testimony of defendant’s plant superintendent is to the effect that the boiler room in question was a “separate building . . . joined to the main building”, and that to reach it from the cafeteria it would have been necessary to walk some 500 feet over a “devious . . . IT route”, passing through a warehouse, a “finishing room and blocking room” and the “normal engine room”. It may reasonably be inferred from the evidence that claimant and her companions emerged from the building onto a driveway from a door in the “normal engine room”. The boiler room apparently adjoins the engine room but its floor is lower by some five feet. When claimant attempted to re-enter the building alone, she presumably confused the boiler room doors with those of the engine room. She fell and was injured because there was a five-foot drop immediately behind the boiler room doors. The entire
Where an entrance or exit is provided by the employer for his employes ( Black v. Herman,
The most that can be said for claimant is that she was en route to “work” when she opened the boiler room doors and fell into the building. She had not as yet reached the employer’s premises. It is well established that in the absence of special circumstances an accidental injury in going to work or returning is not compensable. Kerwin v. Susquehanna Collieries Co., 112
Judgment reversed and here entered for defendant.
