delivered the opinion of the court:
The employer, Lybrand, Ross Bros. & Montgomery, appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of Cook County upholding the Industrial Commission’s concurrence in an arbitrator’s award of compensation for the death of its employee, John D. Muth. The sole issue on review is whether the death, resulting from injuries sustained in an auto accident which occurred while the employee was returning home from the employer’s annual golf outing, arose out of and in the course of his employment under the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
The employer, a large public accounting firm, each year holds a golf outing. An employee selected by the employer handles the arrangements for the affair to which employees and former employees are invited. These include retired persons and persons working elsewhere, in some cases for Lybrand’s clients. The 1963 outing was held at St. Andrew’s Golf and Country Club on August 23. This was a regular working day, and employees were encouraged in the invitation from the firm to so arrange their working engagements that they could attend the outing, and they were paid whether they worked or attended, but were not excused from working if they did not attend. The employer provided the food and drinks, paid for the golf and awarded prizes for various golfing accomplishments. Starting times for golf were controlled and assigned by a committee which allowed employees to choose between a morning or an afternoon time but did not otherwise fix arrival or departure times. Employees arranged their own transportation and apparently were not reimbursed for mileage. After dinner, a partner in the firm made a short speech in which he welcomed those attending the party, expressed the hope that they had been enjoying and would continue to enjoy themselves and introduced various members of the firm. After the speech the prizes were awarded, and then those present played cards, drank, and talked, as they chose, until they decided to leave.
The decedent was personnel manager for Lybrand at the time of his death and had attended all previous outings since coming to the Chicago area. He was not urged to attend this one except by being sent a copy of the circular, received by all employees, which extended the invitation and encouraged attendance. He drove the 50 to 60 miles from his home to the club with two fellow employees, played golf with three former employees, and generally took part in the festivities. He had no special duties at the outing in connection with his work for Lybrand. He left the club around 12:3o to 12145 A.M., with one of the fellow employees driving his (Muth’s) car, and died as a result of injuries sustained in an accident which occurred during the return trip.
The employer places substantial reliance upon Becker Asphaltum Roofing Co. v. Industrial Com.
Two analogous cases have come before this court in more recent times. In Jewel Tea Co. v. Industrial Com.
A related problem arose in Hydro-Line Mfg. Co. v. Industrial Com.
The parties in this case have discussed at length the cases from other jurisdictions in which similar problems were presented. These decisions are summarized by Larson in his treatise on workmen’s compensation law where he lists as the relevant questions: whether the employer sponsored the event; whether attendance was really voluntary; whether attendance was encouraged to some extent; whether the event was employer-financed to a substantial extent; whether the employees regarded the event as an employment benefit to which they had a right; whether the employer benefited tangibly, and not merely through better morale and good will, from the event. (Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, par. 22, 23 (1965).) A review of those cases which are closest to the instant case on their facts will be of help to a determination here.
In Kelly v. Hackensack Water Co.,
In a more recent New Jersey case, Ricciardi v. Damar Products, Inc.
Several New York cases involving facts closely resembling those of the case now before us have sustained awards. Most helpful of these cases are Hill v. McFarland-Johnson Engineers,
In Miller v. Keystone Appliances, Inc. 133 Pa. S. 354,
In United Parcel Service v. Industrial Accident Com.
Recovery was not allowed in three other like cases. In Campbell v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. (Tex.)
One important factor distinguishes the instant case from those in which compensation was denied; here attendance was not without substantial employer compulsion. The golf outing was held on a working day, and employees who did not attend were required to work at their regular duties. This is the same type of effective compulsion that was present in Kelly v. Hackensack Water Co.
We now turn to the question of whether compensation should be denied because the accident occurred while Muth was traveling home from the outing and not while he was at the outing. We need not long pause on this issue in light of our recent decisions in Urban v. Industrial Com.
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
