delivered the opinion of the court:
Aliene B. Quarant, a school teacher, filed an application for adjustment of claim under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The Industrial Commission found the injuries did not arise out of and in the course of her employment and denied compensation, The circuit court of Pope County affirmed the decision, and claimant appeals further to this court.
The claimant was employed to teach at the high school of Pope County Community Unit School District No. 1. The injuries in question were sustained in an automobile accident which occurred as she was driving to work. It appears that on Friday, January 13, 1961, at about eight o’clock in the morning she had taken her io-year-old son to school at the grade school in Golconda and was proceeding west on Highway No. 146 on her way to respondent’s high school about a mile away. She started to pass a car, which was being driven by one of the high school students, when it suddenly swerved across the center line and into the one she was driving. She was alone in the car with a grade book and examination papers she had prepared at home the previous evening, for examinations to be given that morning.
Claimant contends the injuries arose out of her employment because the accident occurred during the “rush hour”, in which the congested traffic conditions were caused in large part by the district’s school buses and other vehicles carrying school personnel and students, and because the highway was the only one leading to the school premises. We cannot accept the argument. The hazard created by traffic conditions was one to which the general public was exposed in as large a degree as was the claimant. At the time of the accident she was not subjected to any greater risk than were other members of the public passing along the highway. Nor was she performing any of the duties of her employment. It is not sufficient to establish merely that she would not have been at that place but for her job. (Christian v. Chicago & Illinois Midland Railway Co.,
The claimant argues further that she was in the course of her employment because she had school materials in her possession and because her duties required her to observe and report injuries involving pupils in her charge. There is no merit in the contention. Neither the papers she was carrying nor the fact that the driver of the other car was a high school pupil had anything to do with the source of the injury, which was one which might equally have happened to any member of the public who might have been driving at that time and place. Even if it were shown that claimant was in the course of her employment that fact would not be sufficient to make the injuries compensable. It was also incumbent upon her to prove they arose out of her employment; that is, the accident must be shown to have resulted from a risk incidental to the employment. Klug v. Industrial Com.,
In Board of Education v. Industrial Com.,
In Klug v. Industrial Com.,
The Klug and Board of Education cases are not distinguishable in any material respect from "the case at bar, and a similar conclusion must follow here. The judgment of the circuit court is correct and is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
