This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court affirming an award by the Industrial Commission to the widow *52 and minor children of Grover Portee who died on October 16, 1957. The questions presented are (1) Have the claimants shown that the deceased suffered an injury by accident? (2) If so, did such injury arise out of and in the course of his employment?
The deceased, Grover Portee, a Negro about 32 years of age and apparently in good physical condition, was employed as a male attendant or orderly in the Negro Division of the South Carolina State Hospital. He and his wife, who was employed in another ward at this institution, reported for work at seven o’clock on the morning of October 16, 1957. He was suffering from a sore throat. About 8:40 that morning he escorted a patient to the ophthalmologist and left him with the attendant in that office. He then went to the office of Margie Bradley, a technician at the hospital, and requested medication for his sore throat. As she had done on several other occasions when deceased had a similar ailment, she gave him a shot of penicillin. The needle jammed and she was unable to complete the injection. Shortly thereafter the deceased was seized with tremors and commenced frothing at the mouth. A physician at the hospital was immediately summoned. The deceased was found in a critical condition. Two other physicians were called. They attempted to revive him with stimulants and artificial respiration. He died at 9:30 that morning, or within an hour after he received the shot of penicillin. It is conceded that death was due to “acute anaphylactic shock caused by procaine penicillin.”
Margie Bradley, a Negress in her late twenties, had been employed at the State Hospital for about four years. After graduating from high school she went to college for a period of three years, and had attended 52 classes in medical training at the hospital. There were no registered nurses in her ward. Her work was varied and included giving medicine to the patients. She usually gave the injections of penicillin. She had access to this drug and to the needles. She testified that she was not permitted to give penicillin to the patients except when directed to do so by one of the physicians but without *53 such authorization she had from time to time given this drug to persons who were not patients. The Industrial Commission found, to which there has been no exception: “From the evidence and exhibits it can be deduced that it was common practice at this State Hospital for the employees to administer medications to each other as the occasions arose.”
The Commission concluded that the act of the deceased in taking penicillin was not entirely personal but was for the mutual benefit of himself and his employer. It found: “It was to the employer’s advantage that the employee-claimant receive this penicillin shot, as he had done on previous occasions, to ward off any possibility of passing the infection on to the patients at the South Carolina State Hospital.”
We have no difficulty in concluding that deceased suffered an injury by accident.
Alewine v. Tobin Quarries, Inc.,
206 S. C. 103,
The question of whether the accident arose out of and in the course of the employment is a more troublesome one. Appellants say that deceased, without the consent or knowledge of his employer, left “his post of duty” and in violation of the rules of the hospital prevailed upon another employee to give him an injection of penicillin solely for his personal comfort and not for any reason connected with his employment.
In
lohnson v. Merchant’s Fertiliser Co.,
198 S. C. 373,
In
Mack v. Branch No. 12, Post Exchange,
207 S. C. 258,
In
Mack v. Branch No. 12, Post Exchange, supra, 207
S. C. 258, 35 N E. (2d) 838, and
McCoy v. Easley Cotton
*55
Mills, supra,
218 S. C. 350,
We now turn to the cases involving the right to recover ■compensation where death or injury results from an effort of an employee while at work to obtain relief from illness or ■discomfort. Compensation has been allowed in some cases .and denied in others. 58 Am. Jur., Workmen’s Compensation, Section 276; Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, Volume I, Section 13.21; Annotation 144 A. L. R. 361.
In
Elliott v. Industrial Accident Commission,
21 Cal. (2d) 281,
“In the instant case the employee was not feeling well, and took what he supposed was wine as a medication for his indisposition. Certainly a reasonable endeavor to treat by simple remedies a physical ailment occurring during an employee’s working hours is an incident of the employment under the circumstances here presented. Such an act is clearly for the comfort of the employee and definitely cannot be said to be less in the contemplation of the employer than smoking by the employee. If an employee may satisfy his mere per *56 sonal desires such as smoking he may with more reason administer to temporary and minor ailments. The bottle from which he drank was on his employer’s premises, and although it does not appear how it came to be there, the substance therein was that used by the employer in its business and kept on its premises in large containers. In the case of Security Mut. Casualty Co. v. Wakefield, 5 Cir., 108 F. (2d) 273, an employee in the calf splitting room, suffering from indigestion, went to the adjoining pickling room with a fellow employee to obtain a drink of water. He told the latter he would like to have some soda to relieve the indgestion. Upon reaching the pickling room he observed a barrel painted red with a label reading ‘sodium nitrate.’ The barrel being filed with a white substance he believed to be baking soda, he took some in water and died therefrom. While it is. true that the employer therein conceded that the indigestion arose out of the employment, the court announced the rule heretofore stated and held that the injury arose out of the employment. Furthermore, that factor is of small consequence. It is not unusual that an employee may, while working, become ill or indisposed from causes having no connection with his employment. And under such circumstances it may be contemplated that the employee will administer common remedies to alleviate his condition. He is doing no more than should be expected of an employee, that is, administering to his normal body wants.”
In
Stone-Brady, Inc. v. Heim,
It is difficult to reconcile the foregoing cases with certain others in which compensation for injury or death resulting
*57
from self-medication or medication administered by a fellow employee while at work has been denied. Two of the strongest cases supporting the view of appellants in the instant case are
O’Neil v. Carley Heater Company,
There is some doubt as to whether the foregoing New York cases would be followed today by the courts of that State. See Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, Volume 1, Section 13.21. In
Fishman v. S. W. Layton, Inc.,
This conflict of authority need not be pursued further for we do not undertake to lay down any general rule as to compensability for an employee’s injury or death resulting from self-medication or medication by others during- hours of employment. Suffice it to say that under the particular facts of the instant case, to which this decision is strictly limited, we think the award made by the Industrial Commission should be sustained.
It would seem clear that the slight deviation by the deceased to obtain medication for his sore throat did not break the chain of employment. Although the further question of whether the occurrence resulting in his death grew out of his employment is a very close one, we think the evidence reasonably warrants an inference that it did. The commission has found that the injection of the penicillin was done not only for the purpose of relieving the personal discomfort of the deceased but “to ward off any possibility of passing the infection on to the patients.” The woman who gave the injection was the person -who usually performed this duty al the hospital. She had full access to the penicillin and needles. On previous occasions she had given this drug not only to the patients but to others, including the deceased. While she says she was permitted to do so only when directed by one of the physicians, there is no evidence that any such rule was known to the deceased. The following is taken from 99 C. J. S., Workmen’s Compensation, § 245, page 870: “The disobedience by fellow workmen of orders is as much one of the risks of a man’s employment as a defect in the mechanical appliances.”
Finally, it is suggested that deceased should have consulted one of the hospital physicians and not sought medication *59 from a mere technician, but any error of judgment in this, respect would not bar compensation.
Affirmed.
