OPINION
Defendant, North River Insurance Company, appeals from a judgment based on jury findings awarding plaintiff, Clinton Purdy, compensation under the Texas Workers Compensation Act for injuries received when he prevented a man from entering through a window in a motel room where he was staying. Defendant is the compensation carrier for plaintiffs employer, MICA Corporation (MICA). 1
MICA’s principal business consists of providing roadway signs and lighting for the Texas Highway Department and other governmental entities. Because of the nature of the services rendered by MICA, the major portion of the work performed by its employees is done in cities and localities other than Fort Worth, where MICA maintains its home office. In most cases, when MICA sends its employees to work on a highway project away from Fort Worth, it is understood that the employees will temporarily relocate to the city where the work is to be performed. The employees, including plaintiff, are paid by the hour, receive $25.00 per day to cover living expenses, and are permitted to stay wherever they wish when away from Fort Worth.
Plaintiff was sent to San Antonio to work on a U.S. Highway 90 project for the Texas Highway Department. He drove to San Antonio with his foreman, who took him to the Gateway Motel, described as the only “fit” motel near the work site. During the time plaintiff worked on the San Antonio project, he stayed at the Gateway. On January 13, 1984 at about 3:00 A.M. he saw a man trying to enter his motel room through a window. He got up and attempted to push the intruder back through the window. As a result, he cut his hand on window glass, severing numerous tendons and nerves, and requiring extensive microdissection surgery.
The Texas Worker’s Compensation Act defines the term “injury sustained in the course of employment” to include all injuries “having to do with and originating in” the employer’s work, trade or business and which are received by the employee while he is “engaged in or about the furtherance of his employer's affairs or business.” TEX.REV.CIV.STAT.ANN. art. 8309, § 1 (Vernon 1967). Defendant insists that plaintiff was not injured while he was engaged in the furtherance of his employer’s business, because the injury occurred after plaintiff, “an hourly wage earner, had left work for the day, was not on call, and in fact was asleep in the middle of the night.” In advancing this argument defendant relies heavily on
Rodriguez v. Great American Indemnity Co.,
In
Rodriguez,
a San Antonio carpenter, an hourly wage earner, was performing work in Del Rio for his employer. Because it was not practical for him to make the round trip of 320 miles every day, Rodriguez stayed in a Del Rio hotel, was paid an allowance for room and board, and made
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his own arrangements for food and lodging. The Fifth Circuit, applying Texas law, held that his death as the result of a hotel fire after he had retired for the night was not compensable because he was not injured in the course of his employment. The court applied the well-settled rule that an employee who is employed at regular hours and places is not entitled to compensation if he is injured going to and from work or when asleep or otherwise off duty.
In
Wallace,
the worker, who lived in quarters furnished by his employer near the job site, was denied compensation for an injury suffered in his living quarters while he was off duty. The court pointed out that he “was as free to come and go as he would have been had he been living in his own home entirely separate from his employer’s premises.”
These two decisions are incompatible with recent Supreme Court decisions and later a decision by the same court which decided
Wallace.
In
Shelton v. Standard Insurance Company,
A similar conclusion was reached in
Texas Employers’ Insurance Association v. Cobb,
North River seeks to distinguish
Shelton
and
Cobb
on the basis that the injured parties in those cases were salaried employees as opposed to those in
Rodriguez
and
Wallace
who, like Purdy, were hourly wage earners with fixed hours of employment. We do not find this to be a valid distinction. While it could be argued that Shelton and Cobb were paid while they ate and slept since they were on salaries, they certainly were not “on duty” during those times. Their employers recognized that their employees’ needs for rest and nourishment had to be met in order for them to perform their jobs.
Shelton,
The test for determining whether an injury was received during the course of em
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ployment when the injury was suffered by an employee whose employer requires him to travel is whether the injury “has its origin in a risk created by the necessity of sleeping or eating away from home....”
Shelton,
A claimant under the Texas Worker’s Compensation Act must show not only that the injury was received in the course of his employment, but also that the injury was of a kind and character that had to do with and originated in the employer’s work, trade, business or profession.
Texas General Indemnity Co. v. Bottom,
The peculiar risk test urged by appellant does not reflect Texas law.
2
As noted by the Texas Supreme Court, the positional risk test has been accepted by Texas courts as well as by other jurisdictions.
Walters v. American States Insurance Co.,
In Texas Employers’ Insurance Association v. Cobb, supra, Cobb, a traveling salesman on a business trip, died from carbon monoxide poisoning while sleeping in a tourist cabin. The court allowed recovery, noting that the character of Cobb’s employment:
imposed upon him the duty to go from place to place at the will of his employer in the performance of his duty, and the risks incident thereto are directly causal connections between the employment itself and the injury.
Cobb,
North River argues also that the trial court erred in submitting the “comfort and convenience” instruction in connection with Special Issue No. 1. North River contends that there is no evidence to support its *634 submission, that the instruction is misleading and, that it amounts to a direct comment on the weight of the evidence.
Special Issue No. 1 included the following definition and instruction:
“INJURY IN THE COURSE OF EMPLOYMENT” means any injury having to do with and originating in the work, business, trade or profession of the employer, received by an employee while engaged in or about the furtherance of the affairs or business of his employer, whether upon the employer’s premises or elsewhere. An injury, “has to do with and originates in the work business trade or profession of the employer” when it results from a risk or hazard which is ordinarily inherent in the performance of the work or business.
You are instructed that an employee may in the course of his employment perform acts of a personal nature that a person might reasonably do for his health and comfort and an injury sustained while doing so is not a departure from the course of employment.
North River claims that to be compensa-ble, an act undertaken for purposes of personal health and convenience must have occurred while on the employer’s premises and during working hours,
Weaver v. Standard Fire Insurance Co.,
Numerous cases previously discussed clearly establish that a claimant need not be on his employer’s premises in order to be in considered injured “in the course of employment.”
See e.g. Mapp v. Maryland Casualty Corp., supra; Shelton v. Standard Insurance Co., supra; Texas Employers’ Insurance Association v. Cobb, supra.
Cases such as the ones noted above, where a traveling employee was injured while eating or sleeping, are in reality “comfort and convenience” cases. Whether an employee was in the course of employment when he received an injury is ordinarily a question of fact, and each case must be determined upon its own peculiar facts.
Standard Fire Insurance Co. v. Rodriguez,
North River argues that the instruction was an improper comment on the weight of the evidence because the jury might assume that any act of personal convenience taken at any time and in any place would be within the course of employment. In reviewing a complaint regarding a jury charge, the charge must be considered as a whole.
Briseno v. Martin,
Finally, North River argues that the trial court erred in submitting an incomplete instruction on the employee’s intention to injure another. North River contends that the intention of the third party attacker *635 was material to a resolution of the course of employment issue.
The trial court submitted the following concerning an employee’s intent to injure another:
“EMPLOYEE’S INTENTION TO INJURE ANOTHER” means an injury caused by the employee’s willful intention and attempt to injure some other person is not in the course of employment, unless the injury results from a dispute arising out of the employee’s work or in the manner of performing it and the employee’s acts growing out of such dispute are done in a reasonable attempt to prevent interference with the work or in reasonable self-defense.
North River requested an additional instruction that:
(a)n injury is not in the course of employment if it is caused by the act of another person intended to injure the employee because of reasons personal to the employee and not directed against him as an employee or because of his employment.
The requested instruction was not proper because there is no evidence in the record indicating that the intruder injured or intended to injure Purdy. All that the evidence established was that Purdy prevented the intruder from entering through a broken window, and in so doing, injured himself. Issues and instructions not raised by the evidence do not require submission.
Bounds v. Caudle,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. It is unclear from the record whether Purdy's employer is MICA or MICO Corporation. It is called both throughout the record and briefs, and even Purdy, in his petition, uses both names.
. The peculiar risk doctrine has "gradually achieved a well-deserved oblivion" in Texas and elsewhere. 1A A. LARSON, THE LAW OF WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION, § 6.30, 3-4.
