54 S.E.2d 471 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1949
Lead Opinion
The evidence did not authorize the finding of the single director of the State Board of Workmen's Compensation that the accident resulting in the employee's death did not arise out of the employment.
The findings of fact by the single director bearing upon that point are these: "The deceased was a common laborer working in the lumber yard of the Reynolds Manley Lumber Company. He was known as a lumber stacker, his duties consisting of stacking lumber and loading the lumber on vehicles. On June 30, 1948, some fifteen employees were working in and around the lumber yard of the defendant, the deceased being one of this number. The deceased and a fellow employee had finished loading a wagon with dry lumber from a lumber stack. They had completed loading the wagon, and the deceased's fellow employee left the scene for the purpose of getting a tractor driver to haul the wagonload of lumber away. While waiting for his fellow employee to return, the deceased leaned up against a pile of lumber, when, without warning, a bolt of lightning struck the deceased, causing instant death. It was not raining at the time, nor had it rained that day. There were no trees in the lumber yard or in the immediatevicinity where the deceased was standing. There was nothing onthe person of the deceased such as a hammer, saw, shovel or othermetallic object which might be said to have attracted the lightning. From the entire evidence it is apparent that the deceased was merely standing at a spot where the bolt of lightning chose to strike. . . The danger of being struck bylightning is not peculiar to lumber yards, it is a common neighborhood hazard and not peculiar to the deceased'semployment. Being struck by lightning is not a risk incident to working in a lumber yard, nor is it a risk connected with the business of stacking and loading lumber. The deceased was no more subjected *828
to the hazard of being struck by lightning than any other person in the neighborhood." (Emphasis added.) Counsel for both the claimant and the defendant rely with equal fervor upon the case of City of Atlanta v. Parks,
Judgment reversed. Gardner and Townsend, JJ., concur.
Addendum
Denied. Gardner and Townsend, JJ., concur. *831