We can well appreciate the appellee’s vigorous support of the reasoning of the Court of Appeals. If negligence of an employer is to cast the balance in favor of coverage under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, he will have the best of both worlds. When an injury is occasioned by his default, he is shielded from heavy potential liability at common law. When, on the other hand, аn injury occurs in the absence of his failure of a common-law duty, his experience rate is unaffected. We cannot approve this novel doctrine and, therefore, reverse.
Perhaps it desеrves repeating here that the adoption of the Workmen’s Compensation Act was not merely to compensate injuries for which an employer would otherwise be liable
The source of the rule of this case as pronоunced in the syllabus can be traced directly to DeCamp v. Youngstown Municipal Ry. Co.,
In the retrospect of over 40 years, the difficultiеs of the first two “zone” cases seem minimal. Industrial Commission v. Pora,
DeCamp held that the injury of an employee of the street railway company occurring at a regular car stop on the company premises at which he usually alighted and did, in fact, alight on the day in question on his way to work in the car barns was in the course of his employment because his contract of hire included both wages and transportation to and from work. The difference between free transportation on the facilities of the employer and the privilege of parking and storing an employee’s private means of transportation for a nominal fee on premises owned and maintained by the employer conveniently to the place of work, would seem to be insubstantial. In neither situation is the employee pursuing the will of, or controlled by, the employer. He is availing himself of a privilege rather than obeying a duty.
In any event, that point was ignored in Industrial Commission v. Henry,
“Where the claimant’s decеdent had entered upon his employment in the early morning hours, had left the premises of the employer to get his breakfast at a restaurant, in accordance with a custom acquiesced in by the emрloyer, and, while returning to the premises of the employer by a direct and necessary route along a public thoroughfare, was struck by a train running upon the tracks of a railroad so immediately adjacent to the premises of the employer that the only way of ingress and egress toward the restaurant was one of hazard, the accident arose out of and in the course of decedent’s employment.”
Four months later, the rule reached full development when Kasari v. Industrial Commission,
“1. An employee, entering the premises of his employer to begin the discharge of the duties of his employment but who has not yet reached the place where his service is to be rendered, is dischаrging a duty to his employer which is a necessary incident to his day’s work.
“2. Traversing the zone between the entrance of the employer’s premises and the plant where an employee is employed, is оne of the hazards of the employment.
“3. The negligence of an employer is not a necessary element of recovery by an employee out of the Workmen’s Compensation Fund, neither will the сontributory negligence of the
In Gregory v. Industrial Commission,
Subsequently, in Merz v. Industrial Commission,
When Marlow was injured, he was in that zonе and his injury was proximately caused by a natural hazard of the zone. It was not self-inflicted or a result of an act of nature or of an occurrence inconsistent with his employment, its activities, conditions оr environments. Cf. the following cases in which compensation was denied: Eagle v. Industrial Commission,
Finally, comment should be directed to at least two unfortunate utterances which recur in the reports and which serve more to confuse than to clarify. The first is found in the third paragraph of the syllabus in Industrial Commission v. Lewis, supra (
“Compensation from such fund is authorized only for an injury sustained by the employee in the performance of some act or in the discharge of some duty in the service of his employer.” Although wholly accurate as applied to the facts of that cаse, as a general proposition it would require us to overrule Gregory, Kasari, Henry, Barber and DeCamp, supra, which we are not disposed at this time to do.
The second imprecise statement appears as early as the syllabus of Slanina v. Industrial Commission, supra (
Although the phrase was again employed in Walborn v. General Fireproofing Co.,
We believe the law was correctly applied in Krovosucky v. Industrial Commission, supra (
Judgment reversed.
